Film Review
The conflict between the generations is a recurring theme in the cinema
of Claude Sautet. Often as not, it is peripheral to the main
drama, but in
Un mauvais fils
it is absolutely central, the lightning conductor in a raging emotional
thunderstorm. The fraught relationship between a middle-aged
father and his estranged son Bruno is mirrored by one of a gentler hue,
that between a gay bookshop owner and his attractive employee
Catherine, who is his adopted daughter in all but name.
Bruno appears to have more in common with Catherine, a perfect
stranger, than with his father, and so whilst one relationship
withers, another flourishes.
Here, it is narcotics abuse that marks out the generational fault
lines. Neither Bruno's father nor Catherine's attentive employer
can understand the need for drugs and regard this as a sign of the lack
of staying power in today's younger generation - their moral position
is slightly undermined by the fact that both men consume alcohol.
Bruno's own moral judgements are shown to be as flawed and trivial as
his father's and the rift that opens up between them through a mutual
misunderstanding and lack of willingness to see things from the other's
viewpoint soon appears unbridgeable. Sautet is, if anything, an
optimist, and the film ends not with a permanent estrangement but with
the possibility of a lasting reconciliation between the
generations. Blood is, after all, thicker than water.
Sautet had originally considered Gérard Depardieu for the part
of Bruno but later changed his mind when he thought that the actor was
too self-assured to convincingly play the fragile main
protagonist. Patrick Dewaere was the ideal substitute, an actor
renowned for playing tormented, multi-faceted and usually sympathetic
no-hopers. As a man, Dewaere was an enigma, an affable, moody and
impulsive force of nature - he had a massive falling out with the media
around the time he made this film (the result of his punching a
journalist) and he took his own life (for reasons that remain unknown)
just a few years later. As an actor, he was virtually unrivalled
at the time he was working, certainly one of the most talented and
charismatic actors in French cinema, although his professional
reputation was tarnished somewhat by his temperamental
personality.
In
Un mauvais fils, Dewaere
gives one of his most nuanced and engaging performances, one that
expresses far more about his character than his prosaic dialogue can
ever hope to do and which forces the spectator to share his sense of
dislocation from the world around him. Watching Dewaere in his
films is always a fascinating and moving experience, simply because the
actor projects so much of himself into his screen portrayals and never
gives us cause to doubt that he is living the part with every fibre of
his being whilst he is in front of the camera. It is hard to
imagine a more committed and instinctive actor than Patrick
Dewaere. He deserves to be ranked alongside such luminaries as
Marlon Brando and
Robert De Niro as one of the great talents of the silver screen,
tragically brief though his career was.
The four other main roles are just as well-cast and beautifully
complement Dewaere's faultless performance. The part of Bruno's
mercurial father is superbly rendered by Yves Robert, a
distinguished character actor who was also an accomplished film
director (his best known work being the popular
La Gloire de mon père /
Le Château de ma mère
(1990) diptych). Robert's portrayal is so unnervingly in sympathy
with Dewaere's that we never question that their characters are father
and son. Just as commendable is Brigitte Fossey's sensitive
portrayal of a vulnerable young woman struggling (and failing) to
overcome her drugs dependency, and we must not overlook the exceptional
contributions from Jacques Dufilho and Claire Maurier, who bring colour
and depth to their complex supporting characters.
Dewaere, Dufilho and Maurier were all nominated for a César for
their performances, but only Dufilho received the award (in the Best
Supporting Actor category). The film was nominated
(unsuccessfully) in three other categories (Best Director, Best Design
and Best Sound). Claude Sautet may have made barely a dozen
films, but few would dispute that he is one of the great auteurs of
French cinema, highly regarded for his meaningful, lovingly crafted
explorations of the human soul. Amidst Sautet's other
masterworks,
Un mauvais fils is all
too easily overlooked, but it is surely one of the director's finest
achievements - as much a testament to Sautet's skill as a film director as it
is to Patrick Dewaere's incomparable talent as an actor. Many
other filmmakers have examined the inter-generational divide, but
rarely with the finesse and insight that Sautet shows in this
magnificent film.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Claude Sautet film:
Garçon! (1983)
Film Synopsis
Having spent five years in an American prison for drugs dealing,
Bruno Calgagni returns to France to make a fresh start. He meets
up with his father, a foreman on a building site, and learns that his
mother died whilst he was in jail. The initially warm reunion of
father and son quickly turns sour, and Bruno walks out on his father
when he discovers he has a secret mistress. After a spell
as a manual labourer Bruno gets a more comfortable job working in an
upmarket bookshop. It is here that he meets Catherine, a young
woman who, like him, is attempting to rebuild her life after being
cured of her drugs addiction. Bruno and Catherine are instantly
drawn to one another and are soon pursuing an intense love
affair. But, just when things appear to be getting better for
them both the storm clouds return...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.