Film Review
At first sight, Louis Malle's follow-up to his stylish modernist noir
thriller
Ascenseur pour l'échafaud
(1958) appears to be nothing more than a conventional bourgeois
romantic drama, a familiar tale of marital infidelity that offers few
surprises and a sackload of clichés.
Yet surfaceimpressions can be very misleading and anyone familiar with Malle's
work would be surprised if this were not the case. The plot is
one you would expect to find between the rose-scented covers of a Mills
and Boon paperback, although it was in fact taken from a short story by
the eminent 18th Century writer and diplomat Dominique Vivant (whose main claim to
fame is being appointed the first director of the Louvre museum).
The setting, the characters, even the mise-en-scène, all reek of
bourgeois complacency, and yet the film is one of Malle's most
subversive and provoked an enormous outcry from scandalised
commentators when it was first seen.
Les Amants earned itself notoriety
with its groundbreaking love scene, the first time a female orgasm was
depicted on the screen (and also cinema's first allusion to oral
sex). Although this sequence is mild by today's standards, it
earned the film an 18 classification in France and an outright ban in
several states in the US. For the UK release, the love scene had
to be trimmed to meet the censorship requirements. This hue and
cry worked to Malle's advantage - the film went on to become a
worldwide hit and established the director's international
reputation.
The screenplay was written by Louise Lévêque, the
aristocratic writer who had penned the novel
Madame de..., which had been turned
into a film by Max Ophüls in the early 1950s. Like
Lévêque, Malle came from an exceptionally privileged
background, although his work often belies this fact and reveals a
distinct anti-bourgeois, humanist streak. The fact that Louis
Malle found fame just as Truffaut, Godard, et al were beginning to make
an impact is what led him to become associated with the French New
Wave, although he stands apart as an auteur in his own right.
Malle's films are conventionally made, having none of the stylistic
innovation that we most associate with la Nouvelle Vague, but they
distinguish themselves with their subject matter. Malle is not
concerned with the nombrilistic exercise in re-inventing cinema for its
own sake, but rather in challenging society's attitudes to taboo
subjects such as illicit sex, depression, death and racial
prejudice. He was every bit as radical as Godard and Rivette, but
only in what he said, not how he said it. With its explicit
portrayal of forbidden love,
Les
Amants brought about its own revolution. This is the film
that knocked down the barricades of prudish restraint and altered
cinema's relationship with sex forever.
Les Amants was also an
important milestone in the career of its lead actress Jeanne
Moreau. Although she had previously starred in
Ascenseur pour l'échafaud
(1958) and had been appearing in films since the early 1950s, Moreau's
breakthrough only came with her intensely sensual portrayal in this
film. This is the role that led Truffaut to cast her as the femme fatale Catherine in
Jules
et Jim, her most celebrated part and the one which won her
international recognition. For the rest of her remarkable career,
Moreau would often be called upon to play variants of the kind of
character she first portrayed in
Les
Amants - inscrutable and sensual women whose cool, often severe
exterior mask the passion and frenzy that lie beneath. In
Les Amants's famous love scenes,
Moreau is captured at her most beautiful, but these also expose the
darkness beneath the surface - the trepidation of a gambler who stakes
everything on what she knows may well be a losing hand. More than
anything, it is the power of Moreau's performance, the mystique and
subtle ambiguity of her characterisation, that makes this such a potent
film.
Cinematographer Henri Decaë brings a Cocteau-esque unreality to
the sequence in which Jeanne Moreau and her co-star Jean-Marc Bory take
a nocturnal stroll through the grounds of the country house. We
ought to cringe at what, on the face of it, is a characteristically
bourgeois depiction of an amorous encounter. Yet such is the
exquisite beauty of Decaë's composition, so effective is it at
conveying the sense of two people falling in love, that it can only
enchant us and take us back to that magical scene in
Belle et la bête where
the evil spell is broken and the Beast wins Beauty's heart for
eternity. It is only when morning comes and the evening's
enchantment has passed that the fairytale illusion begins to fade.
Jeanne's hesitation and unease as she embarks on her new life with
Bernard tell a great deal, revealing the rocky path that lies
ahead. Will Jeanne's need for material comfort and status triumph
over what may prove to be a mere ephemeral infatuation, or will she be
like Beauty, and live happily ever after in the arms of her new beau
idéal? As the clapped-out 2CV drives off down the bumpy
country lane, we have a shrewd idea of what lies ahead. We can
hardly fail to see the strings that bind Jeanne to her genteel
bourgeois milieu tightening, slowly pulling her back to a life of
gracious living, self-esteem and ennui relieved by the occasional
amorous fling in Paris. For those born with a silver spoon in
their mouths, how can
amour fou
possibly compete with
amour-propre? Isn't
it typical of Louis Malle to switch off the camera
just as these doubts enter our minds and lead us to anticipate the
multiple pile-up that lies around the next bend?
© James Travers 2011
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Next Louis Malle film:
Zazie dans le métro (1960)