Film Review
André Delvaux directed this haunting mélange of dream and reality, his second
full-length film after his acclaimed
L'Homme au
crâne rasé (1966). Delvaux's work is strongly influenced by
other great directors (Resnais, Coctau, Buñuel...), and also by the great tradition
of Flemish art. His films consequently have a strong aesthetic sense that is unique to
the director.
Un soir, un train probably
best exemplifies Delvaux's technique of weaving together real experiences with those
of the imagination, rather like Resnais but with a darker, almost macabre, kind of poetry.
Being Belgian, one of the biggest concerns in Delvaux's life was that of being
able to communicate with others. In a country where two languages prevail with equal
rigour (but with an unspoken understanding that French was the preferred language), this
is hardly surprising. It is a theme which recurs in much of Belgian art, and one
that assumes paramount importance in the work of André Delvaux. The couple
who cannot speak to one another in this film is a metaphor for a nation that is divided
by a linguistic barrier. Then, in the remarkable dream sequence (which fits so well
with the rest of the film that you hardly notice it as a dream as such), we have the absurd
situation of a university professor being stranded in a village where he cannot communicate
with anyone. It is as though an unbridgeable gulf exists to separate Mathias from
those he tries to speak with - that gulf being perhaps the unreal frontier between
life and death. He sees death in front of him, but whilst he remains mortal he cannot
commune with it. Parallels with Cocteau's
Orphée
(1949) are easily seen.
For such a rigorously intellectual film,
Un
soir, un train is profoundly humanist and strangely compelling. The calibre
of a director can often be gauged by the actors he selects for his film, and on this basis
Delvaux is a genius. The couple Yves Montand and Anouk Aimée are perfectly
cast - Aimée's ethereal distance contrasting beautifully with Montand's
sombre, darkly introspective presence. The two actors manage to portray the sense
of emotional separation between their characters brilliantly, like trains moving slowly
but inexorably apart. Mathias' apparent loss at the end of the film, when
he emerges from the dream of his imagination into the dream that is living consciousness,
is not just heartfelt; it is devastating.
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next André Delvaux film:
Rendez-vous à Bray (1971)
Film Synopsis
Mathias is professor of linguistics at a Belgian university. Although middle-aged,
he is unmarried, but has a mistress, Anne. Their relationship looks as if it may
be coming to an end, but Mathias tries to rekindle the flame. After a passionless
dinner together, Mathias leaves to catch a train to a town where he is to give a lecture.
On the train, Mathias is delighted to see Anne enter his compartment. The couple
are unable to talk with one another and Mathias falls asleep. Having dreamt about
a train accident, Mathias awakes to find his train has stopped and Anne has vanished.
When he leaves the train to investigate, the train continues on its way, leaving Mathias
and two other men stranded in open countryside. Under nightfall, the three men make
their way to a nearby village which is strangely silent. When they finally meet
the locals, Mathias is surprised that he cannot recognise their language. Where
is he, and what has happened to his beloved Anne?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.