Asphalte
1959 Drama  
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Credits
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Summary
For Nicole, marriage to a wealthy businessman brings comfort but not
happiness. An endless round of travelling and business dinners
has left her bored and jaded. When, one evening, she meets
Michel, a close childhood friend, happy memories come flooding back to
her. Whilst her husband is away on another business trip, she
allows Michel to take her back to the working class area where she grew
up. It is a decision she soon lives to regret...
Review
Towards the end of the 1950s, French cinema had, to a large extent,
become stale and predictable, consisting mainly of American-inspired
thrillers, stodgy historical dramas, twee melodramas and
uninspired low-budget comedies. This particular applecart
of lukewarm mediocrity was on the verge of being kicked over and
trodden into the ground by a new generation of filmmaker which was
determined to bring a fresh perspective to cinema - the Nouvelle Vague
or French New Wave. Prior to this cultural tsunami, the calm shoreline
of 1950s French cinema was tickled by the occasional small breaker which
had little impact other than to
presage the upheaval that was to come. One such film was Asphalte.
It may not be brilliant but Asphalte is memorable for a number of respects. Firstly, it includes some elements of social realism, something which hadn’t registered much in French cinema in spite of it being very noticeable in other European countries at the time - notably Italy and Great Britain. More often than not, French cinema ignored the working class altogether or else depicted it in an idealised or highly caricatured way, a long way from the daily reality. More significantly, the film goes out of its way to offer a convincing portrayal of the youth culture of the day, complete with loud music, wild partying and testosterone-charged fistfights - something else which French cinema seemed to have largely overlooked. The film’s director Hervé Bromberger may well have been influenced by American cinema, where youth culture was far better represented, most famously in Nicholas Ray’s Rebel Without a Cause (1955). Although Asphalte’s subject matter does give it an appealing veneer of modernity, stylistically it takes very few risks and remains pretty much a conventional of 1950s melodrama, with bland characterisation and a plodding narrative with an all too predictable outcome. But at least it offers a glimmer of what was to come, both cinematically and in terms of changing social attitudes. © James Travers 2008 Write a review for this film... |
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