Film Review
Une chambre en ville was
Jacques Demy's last great achievement but it was a film which he long
wanted to make, as far back as the late 1950s, when the spectacle of a
violent showdown between striking workers and riot police in his home
town of Nantes was vividly imprinted on his mind. It was not
until the mid-1970s that Demy had the confidence to make the film,
although his plans were derailed after a catastrophic falling out with
the actors he had chosen for the lead roles - Catherine Deneuve and
Gérard Depardieu - who insisted that they should sing all their
dialogue. In each of the three musicals she had made for Demy
prior to this, Deneuve had been dubbed by a professional singer and was
unwilling to repeat the experience; Demy's refusal to acquiesce
resulted in a lasting rift between Deneuve and the director who had
made her an international star. As Demy's career declined
throughout the rest of the decade, it must have seemed that his pet
project would never see the light of day. It was whilst making
the television film
La Naissance du
jour (1980) that Demy's enthusiasm for
Une chambre en ville was rekindled,
now that he had found the ideal actress to play the lead role of Edith
- the stunning ex-model turned actress Dominique Sanda.
Une chambre en ville differs
from Demy's earlier musicals in one important respect: it is anchored
in the grim reality of everyday life and has none of the kitsch
artificiality that saturates every frame of
Les Parapluies de Cherbourg
(1964) and
Les Demoiselles de Rochefort
(1967). The more sombre tone of the film reflects not just the
tragic nature of the story, a modern retelling of
Romeo and Juliet, but the mood of
the era in which it is set, a time of social unrest and class
division. As in
Les Parapluies
de Cherbourg, every line of dialogue is set to music, although
Michel Colombier's score has a very different quality to that supplied
by Michel Legrand on Demy's first three musicals - far darker, far more
subdued. In contrast to the wistful melancholia of
Cherbourg and the ebullient
optimism of
Rochefort, the
music of
Une chambre en ville
is drenched in an oppressive aura of hopeless fatalism. We
know how the film will end from the very first scene, an ominous
standoff between defiant strikers and baton-wielding police. The
uplifting romanticism of Demy's early films is replaced by something
much grittier, a gloomy admission that true love is experienced only
fleetingly, if ever, in this world of ours. Now that it has
been revealed that Demy pursued various homosexual love affairs (whilst
being married to Agnès Varda), the film acquires perhaps a
deeper significance, shedding more light on its director than was
apparent when it was first seen in 1982.
The casting may not be quite as glitzy as in Demy's previous musicals
but the absence of a hyper-charismatic star is no bad thing, allowing
the film to have a greater sense of reality and truth. Danielle
Darrieux is the biggest name in the cast list, and the only member of
the cast to sing her own dialogue, but her performance is suitably
restrained. Richard Berry makes an effective contrast with
Dominique Sanda, both actors bringing an intense carnal realism to their passionate
on-screen liaison, very different to the tame billing and cooing seen
in previous Demy films. Michel Piccoli imbues his portrayal of
the rejected husband with menace and
poignancy, becoming utterly
terrifying in the film's most shocking sequence when he attacks Sanda
with a cut-throat razor, whilst Jean-François Stévenin
does a good job of ennobling the ordinary working man, resolute in his
beliefs and implacably decent.
Judging by the enthusiastic reaction it received from the critics,
Une chambre en ville should have
been the film which revitalised interest in Demy's work. The film
was nominated for nine Césars in 1983 (including Best Film and
Best Director), but it failed to win a single award. The
cinemagoing public appeared to be singularly unimpressed by the film,
which ended up being a monumental flop. It is hard to account for
the film's failure - it is assuredly one of Demy's most assured and
mature works, more substantial than his early musicals and more
relevant to contemporary society. Most likely it was the downbeat
mood of the film that put off audiences, a mood that was completely
out-of-synch with the renewed spirit of optimism that had broken out in
France following the election of François Mitterand as
President. Whatever the reason, the failure of
Une chambre en ville came as a
bitter blow to Demy, a setback from which he would never recover.
Even today, the film is all too easily overlooked, often dismissed as
an unsuccessful attempt to combine two ill-fitting genres, social
realism and musical. Yet, whilst it may lack the crowd-pulling
appeal of those early Hollywood-inspired musicals of Demy,
Une chambre en ville is
unquestionably a daring experiment in cinematic form, and possibly the
most honest and revealing of all Demy's films.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Demy film:
La Table tournante (1988)
Film Synopsis
Nantes, during the workers' strike of 1955. One of the strikers
is François Guilbaud, a steel worker who rents a room in the
apartment of Margot Langlois, a bourgeois widow who opposes the
strike. One day, François sees a beautiful young woman
dressed only in a mink coat and, thinking she is a prostitute, takes
her to bed. He then discovers that she is Edith Leroyer, his
landlady's rebellious daughter. Tired of being beaten and bullied
by her impotent husband Edmond, Edith plans to leave town and start a
new life elsewhere, hoping that François will join her.
Even though he has managed to get another girl pregnant,
François is ready to elope with Edith, but first he must lend
his support to a strikers' demonstration...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.