Film Review
Les Créatures is arguably the most intriguing work - certainly
one of the most provocative - from Agnès Varda, one of France's
leading women filmmakers. Varda's fourth feature bears scant
resemblance to the three distinctive films that preceded it,
which includes
Cléo de 5 à 7 (1962),
a curious reflection on mortality. With its peculiar mélange of genres
(comedy, thriller, fantasy and eroticism),
Les Créatures
coul easily fit into the oeuvre of Varda's French New Wave contemporary,
Jean-Luc Godard, were it not for its obvious feminine perspective
which sets it apart from other defining works of the Nouvelle Vague.
The film starts out looking like a wry parody of a psychological drama,
with the kind of discordantly eerie music that became the trademark of
another of Varda's contemporaries, Claude Chabrol.
Then, about halfway through, the film veers off in a totally unexpected direction and
becomes unimaginably bizarre, like a Roman Polanski film that has gone
totally off the rails, as it delves into various philosophical themes
such as the existence of free will.
The inspired pairing of Catherine Deneuve and Michel Piccoli
(later famously reunited in Luis Buñuel's
Belle de Jour (1967))
is one of the film's main selling points, but despite this star billing
Les Créatures was poorly received
when it was first released in 1966. The reaction of the critics to the film was hostile and effectively
slammed the brakes on Varda's film making career for a while. Undeterred, Varda went on to make
some significant films in the following decades and she would ultimately - and deservedly
- regain her reputation as one of the most important auteur filmmakers of her generation.
The style of
Les Créatures is more eerily unsettling than its subject matter.
Like Polanski's
Repulsion (1965),
which Deneuve headlined the previous year, the film propels us into an unfamiliar
subjective reality that has its own peculiar logic which leaves the spectator
confused and disoriented. The disjointed
editing, where apparent normality is inter-cut with a bizarre fantasy chess game; the grotesque
caricatures who behave more like animated puppets than creatures we might
recognise as real, living beings; and the seemingly interminable visual metaphors...
Varda presents us with a bizarre fusion of orthogonal realities that
is scarily nightmarish and yet fascinating to watch, and the challenge of deriving
some sense from all this is probably the most appealing aspect of this weirdly
idiosyncratic film.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Agnès Varda film:
L'Une chante, l'autre pas (1977)
Film Synopsis
Still suffering from the trauma of a road accident, a writer named Edgar
finds himself afflicted with a mild case of writer's block. With his
wife Mylène pregnant with their first child and badly in need of some
rest and recuperation, Edgar decides that they should take a break at some
remote spot. The small island of Noirmoutier off the west coast of France
seems ideal for their purpose. Sparsely populated, this tiny windswept
rock in the Atlantic will make a welcome change from the bustle of the big
city. As his mind and body recover from the injuries he sustained in
the accident, Edgar happily sets about writing his next novel, taking his
inspiration from the curious breed of people he meets on the island.
Mylène still hasn't regained her voice, however, and it worries her
husband that she can still only communicate with him by writing notes.
The arrival of the writer and his wife is not welcomed by the islanders,
who, a tight-knit group of individuals, regard them with suspicion and mistrust.
It isn't long before their cold forbearance of the strangers turns to open
hostility. Edgar and his wife have yet to discover the discord that
runs right through the island community. Some have good reason to despise
their neighbours, others are content to wallow in abject solitude. Gradually,
the writer's impression of the island changes as he begins to sense the nastiness
and sickness that lies beneath its seemingly idyllic surface. The person
who most preoccupies him is a lonely old widower, Ducasse, who has just taken
delivery of several mysterious crates. Edgar becomes fixated on knowing
what secret project the widower is preoccupied with, convinced it holds the
key to understanding the islanders' strange behaviour...
© James Travers
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