Film Review
The austere poetry of Georges Franju's cinema is at its most hauntingly
expressive in this evocative adaptation of François Mauriac's
famous 1927 novel,
Thérèse
Desqueyroux. In common with his earlier bleak realist
drama
La Tête contre les murs
(1959) and macabre fantasy
Les Yeux sans visage (1960),
Franju's fourth feature derives most of its intense lyrical power from
its stark visuals, which in this case powerfully convey the sense of
confinement felt by a young married woman who, like a bird trapped in a
cage, pines to be set free.
Thérèse
Desqueyroux is arguably Franju's most inspired and sophisticated
film - not only does it perfectly convey the essence of Mauriac's
novel, it also impresses with its own unique artistry, particularly in
the way in which the heroine's interior world is projected into the
space around her so that we are compelled to sympathise with her
plight, even if we cannot entirely understand her actions.
Early on in a career that would all too rapidly burn itself out,
Emmanuelle Riva was the French actress best suited for the title role
of
Thérèse Desqueyroux,
an ambiguous and not entirely likeable character that calls for a
special talent if she is to avoid coming across as egoistical and
unbearably maudlin. Through a restrained but remarkably
expressive performance, assisted by a hypnotic interior monologue that
runs the entire length of the film, Riva subtly exposes her character's
torment, her sense of entrapment in a stale bourgeois marriage and
longing for release, whilst retaining her sense of mystery.
Thérèse Desqueyroux is one of French literature's most
enigmatic and unfathomable heroines, one who somehow manages to gain
our sympathies by revealing so little about herself. As in the
novel, we never understand what drives Thérèse to attempt
to kill her husband, nor do we really comprehend why she opted to marry
him. She represents that part of ourselves that we can never
understand, the subconscious will that acts seemingly without rhyme or
reason.
Philippe Noiret is equally well-cast for the part of
Thérèse's unsympathetic husband Bernard, perfectly
encapsulating in his performance the cold indifference and
insensitivity of the bourgeois milieu in which the heroine allows
herself to become trapped. Noiret would become a past master at
playing ambiguous characters who are far more complex and perverse than
is apparent on the surface, and his portrayal of Bernard Desqueyroux is
a good example of this. For most of the film, Bernard is the most
unprepossessing of husbands - he neglects his wife before she tries to
kill him, and then, having committed perjury to have her acquitted, he
treats her like a sick animal, locking her away in his remote country
house. It is only when he sees the consequences of his
thoughtless cruelty that his better nature begins to assert itself and
he starts to show Thérèse the kindness she has long
yearned for. The final scene in which Bernard comes so close to a
reconciliation with his wife is devastatingly poignant, but, like
Thérèse, we know he doesn't quite have enough compassion
to make it. It is through a bitter parting that
Thérèse gains her freedom, and you cannot help sensing
that this is not the happy ending she had hoped for.
Whilst the film time-shifts Mauriac's novel (originally set in the
1920s) to the present day and adopts only one point of view (that of
Thérèse), it is in all other respects faithful to its
source. In writing his novel, Mauriac claimed he was strongly
influenced by cinema and employed many cinematic devices (such as the
narrative flashback and sudden opening) to give his book a modern
touch. Franju retains these devices in his film, but more
crucially he manages to replicate the unrelentingly oppressive mood of
the novel whilst preserving the mystique of the central character (in
this he is greatly assisted by a memorable score from Maurice
Jarre). Franju's
Thérèse
Desqueyroux is one of French cinema's most chilling critiques of
the bourgeoisie but it is also a powerfully moving expression of a
basic human impulse, to be set free and live according to the dictates
of our heart, rather than to the rules imposed on us by a society that
values status and order above individuality and personal
fulfilment. Claude Miller's grander
2012 version has a
similar impact, but it falls short of the exquisite poetry of Franju's
film, one of the finest literary adaptations in French cinema.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Georges Franju film:
Judex (1963)
Film Synopsis
Thérèse Desqueyroux tries to kill her husband, Bernard,
by poisoning him, but the attempt fails. To avoid a scandal that
will ruin his name, Bernard gives false evidence which results in his
wife's acquittal. When Thérèse is returning to her
home in Argelouse, she brings to mind the events that led to her
present predicament. She recalls her happy adolescence with her
friend, Anne, whose half-brother she ended up marrying. It was
not to be a happy marriage, though. Bernard's only preoccupations
were his name and fortune, and these led him to break up Anne's love
affair with a Jewish man. When Bernard began taking medicine
containing arsenic, Thérèse saw an opportunity for her to
escape from her miserable existence, by killing the man she has grown
to despise...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.