Film Review
It was the phenomenal success of
Les Galettes de Pont-Aven
(1975), an off-the-wall sex comedy, that allowed director Joël
Séria to realise his most personal and, arguably, finest film,
Marie-poupée. Even for
its day (it was released two years after the first of the
Emmanuelle films), this was a
daring film, one that explores with surprising candour one of the last
taboos of eroticism: fetishism. Critics and audiences were not
prepared for such an explicit dive into perversion and the film proved
to be a massive flop, pretty well scuppering Séria's hopes to be
recognised as a serious filmmaker. His auteur credentials burned
to a frazzle, Séria ended up directing third-rate comedies such
as
San-Antonio ne pense qu'à
ça (1981) and
Les Deux
crocodiles (1987), before partly redeeming himself with his
recent sentimental drama
Mumu (2010).
Séria's decision to cast his wife Jeanne Goupil in the lead
role, that of the doll-like Marie (a Judy Garland look-a-like), was
brave and it is tempting to read an autobiographical confession into
the film. The relationship between any artist and his muse has a
degree of fetishism about it and the fact that Goupil appeared in the
director's previous films suggests that she may have been as much a
doll to Séria as the character she plays in this film.
Marie-poupée is an
unsettlingly weird film, as much because of its unconventional subject
matter as because of Séria's unflinchingly matter-of-fact
treatment of it. It is the film's lack of sensationalism
that makes it so disturbing.
Séria's unfussy direction brings out the best in his perceptive
screenplay. The protagonists are startlingly true to life, played with
total conviction by a talented pool of actors. Complementing
Goupil's remarkable central performance there is a superbly ambiguous
André Dussollier (he starts out his usual charming self but ends
up turning our blood to ice) and a frighteningly mercurial Bernard
Fresson. Andréa Ferréol make her presence felt in a
substantial supporting role, and Fanny Ardant makes her screen debut,
some years before François Truffaut adopted her as his muse.
Marie-poupée is a
compelling and intimate drama that doesn't downplay the uglier side of
fetishism. The most shocking thing about the film is not its
lurid subject matter but the way it strays innocently from banal,
everyday incident into much darker avenues of human experience.
Having surprised us with a wedding night sequence in which Marie's
husband first reveals his fetishism (taking his bride's clothes off,
bathing her and putting her to bed like a doll, all done with exquisite
tenderness), Séria later chills us to the core by replaying the
first part of the scene with Marie substituted for a little girl.
Marie-poupée's
shockingly overt depiction of fetishism doesn't disguise its wider
purpose, which is to condemn all kinds of objectification of women by
men. Marie's husband isn't the only person to regard her as an
object. His farmer, ostensibly a more humane character, also
takes a shine to the doll-like young woman, one that is far more
carnal. One man treats Marie as though she were a toy, the other
attempts to rape her. In each case, it is the woman who
ends up being a victim in a male fantasy, her fairytale delusions
ripped apart by bestial impulses that thrust her into the most
degrading of nightmares. Alas, Joël Séria's
pro-female protestations went virtually unnoticed. He faded into
obscurity whilst others surged forward to grab a place on the
Emmanuelle bandwagon.
Séria's was a lone voice in a cultural and moral wilderness.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Marie is a naive 17-year-old orphan who lives with her
grandparents. One day, she enters a dolls shop and immediately
attracts the attention of its owner, a charming young man named
Claude. It isn't long before they are married and
comfortably installed in Claude's grand country residence. But
theirs is far from being a normal marriage. Claude regards his
wife as just another doll in his collection. They sleep in
separate rooms and the only time Marie sees her husband is when he
wants to indulges his strange fetish, to play with her as if she were a
doll...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.