Biography: life and films
Alain Jessua's filmmaking career spans four decades but in this time he made
only nine features and one short. He was not a prolific director but
he was pretty well unique in that he produced each and every one of his feature
films (through his company A.J. Films). This meant that he had a degree
of independence that very few filmmakers of his generation had, even in the
immediate aftermath of the French New Wave, which is when he had the greatest
impact. Jessua's best films tackle issues that were of concern to him
at the time and which have since become of even greater concern today. These
include: the impact of cultural influences on our lives, fears about immigration,
the exploitation of the world's poor by the rich, and the downside of the
celebrity (get-famous-quick) culture. These films are provocative,
original and entertaining - and it is a shame that he only made ten films.
It is equally sad that his films are not more widely appreciated.
Jessua was born in Paris, France on 16th January 1932. He started
out in the film business in the early 1950s by working as an assistant to
some of the great filmmakers of this era. He assisted Jacques Becker
on
Casque d'Or (1952), with
Yves Allégret on
Mam'zelle Nitouche (1954) and with Max Ophüls
on his last masterpiece
Lola Montès
(1955). He then went on to direct his first film, a short entitled
Léon la lune (1956), which won him the Prix Jean-Vigo for Short
Film in 1957 - an auspicious start to his career.
The director's debut feature
La Vie à l'envers (1964) was a hit with
the critics and immediately established him as one of the post-Nouvelle Vague
directors to watch out for. Arguably his most accomplished work, this
film has the character of a Buddhist parable, depicting a young man's withdrawal
from the flurry and false pleasures of bourgeois Parisian society, into his
own inner world where he discovers the true meaning of existence. With
a strong central performance from Charles Denner, supported by Jean Yanne
in his first screen role,
La Vie à l'envers is an enchanting
and thought-provoking piece of cinema - it was a worthy recipient of the
Best First Work award at the 1964 Venice Film Festival.
Jessua's next film,
Jeu de massacre
(1967), was also highly acclaimed and took the Best Screenplay award at the
Cannes Film Festival in 1967. Starring Michel Duchaussoy and Jean-Pierre
Cassel, it examines how today's cultural influences can distort our perception
of reality and alter our behaviour, usually for the worse.
It was around this time that concerns over the impact of television and cinema
on individuals and society were gaining traction. It is a debate that
still rages to this day and the film probably has greater pertinence
today than when it was first seen.
With
Traitement de choc
(1973), a modern variant on the classic vampire movie, Jessua serves up a
grim little fable that tackles another social concern - the exploitation
of the poor and vulnerable by the rich and powerful. Alain Delon plays
a sinister-looking doctor who promises eternal youth to his clients (one
being Annie Girardot), without telling them that his magical cure involves
preying on young immigrants. The film was criticised for a scene in
which Delon frolics about on the beach in nothing but his birthday suit (hence
the film's ludicrous English language title
Doctor in the Nude) and
was less successful than the star's other films of this era. Whilst
not the director's best film, it makes a succinct allegory that is still worryingly
relevant.
Of all Jessua's films,
Armaguedon
(1977) is the one that probably has the most chilling resonance today.
Again featuring Alain Delon and Jean Yanne, this slick thriller anticipates the reality
TV craze that has since become endemic and warns of its inherent dangers.
Yanne's character epitomises those pathetic individuals who are willing to
do anything to get their fifteen minutes of fame. No French film made
in the 1970s is as grimly prophetic as this one.
Les Chiens (1979) is another
frighteningly prescient film. With strong lead performances from Gérard
Depardieu and Victor Lanoux, it offers a graphic depiction of a small, seemingly
perfect community that becomes so overtaken with fear of outsiders that its
members resort to hunting them to their deaths. Present day fears over
immigration are scarily anticipated in this stark allegory of a society that
succumbs to the worst kind of prejudice and intolerance.
Jessua's uncanny knack of predicting the future takes its most tragic turn
with
Paradis pour tous
(1982). The film depicts a man who, having attempted suicide, is cured
of his depression by a seemingly miraculous cure. The man in question
is played by Patrick Dewaere, who shot himself dead not long after he completed
work on this film. With
Frankenstein
90 (1984), the director offers one of cinema's weirder reinterpretations
of Mary Shelley's famous novel. Whilst far from being the director's
best work, it has great entertainment value, with Jean Rochefort looking
worryingly at home in the role of the mad Dr Frankenstein and rock musician
Eddy Mitchell at his most sympathetic as Rochefort's monstrous creation.
The film was not a commercial success and signalled the beginning of the
end of Jessua's directing career.
His next film,
En toute innocence (1988), in which a murder is committed
to protect family interests, is a somewhat half-baked attack on bourgeois
attitudes that cannot help looking like a second rate Claude Chabrol movie.
The director's final film,
Les Couleurs du diable (1997), is a modern variation
on the Faust legend which contains some interesting ideas but is marred by
a weak script and some poor acting. After this final let down, Alain
Jessua gave up directing for good and devoted himself to his new career as
a novelist. Since 1999, he has so far published six novels, the most
recent being
Petit Ange (2011).
© James Travers 2017
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