Film Review
The mother-daughter relationship viewed through the prism of an eerie
baroque fairytale offers an unusual slant on a familiar theme in this
subtly disturbing directorial debut feature from actress and
photographer Eva Ionesco. As unlikely as it may seem,
My Little Princess is not a lurid
exploitation fantasy but an honest account of the director's own
childhood experiences, experiences which continue to haunt her adult
life and cause her to harbour deep resentment against the person who
inflicted them on her, her mother. From the age of five, Eva
Ionesco was the favourite muse of her mother, the famous Rumanian
photographer Irina Ionesco. By the time she was ten, she was
appearing in magazines in erotic and provocative poses, effectively
becoming the most prominent paedophilic porn model of the 1970s and
giving Louis Malle the inspiration for his most controversial film,
Pretty
Baby (1978). Knowing this, it is easy to rush to
judgement and condemn Irina Ionesco as the most irresponsible of
mothers, if not a sick, evil pervert.
What makes Eva Ionesco's film so interesting is that it does not set
out to demonise the exploitative mother. Instead, ogre though she
most certainly is, she invites pity. She is more amoral than
evil, totally incapable of seeing anything wrong in what she is
doing. She sees her art as merely an extension of her maternal
love, a form of idolatry centred on the most precious thing in her
life, her daughter. Her cluttered baroque apartment, with its
countless mirrors and extravagant ornamentation, both resembles a late
19th century bordello and the interior of a fairytale palace. The
influence of horror films ranging from Murnau's
Nosferatu (1922) to Mario
Bava's
Kill Baby, Kill (1966) is part
of the film's distinctive ambiance, and with good reason. The
mother Hanah is instantly identifiable as the marauding vampire, a
shadowy figure of the night (with a Bette Davis hairstyle) who
preys upon her victim, her daughter, with an obvious salacious
relish. The horror genre is beckoning Eva Ionesco like a grisly
echoing whisper from the tomb.
With her long history of playing demented and dangerous females,
Isabelle Huppert was such an obvious casting choice for the role of the
vampiric mother that it is almost impossible to imagine any other
actress in the part. The weirder the character she gets to play,
the better Huppert is, and here she is at the pinnacle of her
art. Her ambiguous portrayal obviously reflects the ambivalence
that Eva Ionesco feels towards her own mother. The character
Hanah is not just elusive, she is totally unfathomable. We never
feel that we can like or engage with her, and yet neither do we grow to
hate her. She becomes a tragic figure, pitifully marooned in the
fantasy world that has become her life, obsessively devoted to her
daughter and yet incapable of knowing what real love is. Hanah's
monstrosity is seen only in reflection, through the destructive effect
it is having on her daughter Violetta, a picture of innocence
beautifully rendered by 10-year-old Rumanian Anamaria Vartolomei.
It is the slow but inevitable disintegration of the relationship
between Violetta and her mother which provides this languorously dreamy
film with the gentlest of narrative thrusts. At first, Violetta
is a willing accomplice in her mother's fantasies, but slowly, as the
child acquires her own identity and becomes aware that she is being
turned into an object of gratification, the fault lines begin to
show. Whereas Violetta develops in the course of the film,
transformed from a blameless innocent to a very self-aware young lady,
Hanah appears completely unchanged, and is clearly incapable of
change. Next to an artist friend (an unusually sympathetic Denis
Lavant) she appears chronically narcissistic and soulless. She
plays with people like a little girl playing with her dolls, and her
favourite doll is of course her daughter. Hanah's perversity
derives not from malice but from a most extreme form of arrested
development, and this is why we find it impossible to condemn
her. Eva Ionesco may never forgive her mother for what she
subjected her to but, by making this film, she almost certainly grew to
know her a little better and realise that the tragedy of her abused
childhood was not hers alone.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the 1970s, Violetta Giurgiu becomes one of the focal points of the trendy
Parisian art world - quite an achievement for a little girl who is not yet
a teenager. She owes her easily found fame to her mother Hannah, an
artist photographer who adopted her as her muse and in doing so made them
both instant celebrities. Violetta scarcely saw her mother when she
was a toddler. It was in the company of her doting grandmother that
she began to grow up and discover the world. Hannah was an infrequent
visitor into her pampered life, too preoccupied with her artistic career
to spare her daughter any time and affection.
It was to please her mother that little Violetta agreed to be photographed,
innocently at first, but increasingly in ever more provocative poses.
Hannah, of course, saw nothing wrong in using her daughter as her muse.
Violetta was a natural model, ready to do anything to win her mother's approval.
So, without the least suspicion that she was being exploited for dubious
ends, this angelic little girl allowed herself to be made up as a young woman
and encouraged to adopt the most unbecoming poses for a child of her age.
What Hannah believed to be motherly love is likely to be seen in a very light
today...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.