Biography: life and films
Claude Lelouch is the man that serious film critics love to hate.
Reviewing his first film,
Le Propre
de l'homme (1960), one critic on the esteemed
Cahiers du Cinéma commented:
"Claude Lelouch - remember this name, because you will never hear it
again." Six years later, Lelouch took the Palme d'Or at the
Cannes Film Festival and became the most well-known French film
director of his generation. His first major success,
Un homme et une femme (a.k.a.
A Man and a Woman) was a global hit
and introduced more people to French cinema than any other
film. Since then, Lelouch has been relentlessly active in
his filmmaking career, notching up as many king-sized flops as box
office triumphs. In the past half a century, he has made over
forty-five films and shows no sign of stopping. Critical
hostility towards him has mellowed in recent years, ironically just as
his public appeal has begun to wane. The critics' erstwhile
bête noire has aquired some
measure of respectability, although he still manages to receive a fair
quantity of opprobrium from some quarters. Lelouch has never been
bothered by what the critics say of him. As he once remarked: "One
day I'll make a film for the critics, when I have money to lose."
It is not difficult to find fault with Lelouch's distinctive, slightly
over-earnest brand of cinema. Not having attended film school or
even gone to university, Lelouch was entirely self-taught and learned
his craft by making mistakes. This could explain why, as a
director, he is so fearless and so willing to take risks, heedless of
the criticism. For Claude Lelouch, cinema has been more than a
profession; it has been a way of constructing his own philosophy of
life. He is guided not by formal technique, or the desire to make
a radical assault on filmmaking convention (as the New Wave filmmakers
had done), but by his own instincts. Lelouch's cinema may not be
perfect, and some of it is pretty unbearable, but it has those
essential qualities of spontaneity and sincerity. Maybe his films
are a little shallow, a little too self-indulgent, but is that such a
crime? If the hacks on the
Cahiers
du Cinéma had been a little more generous they might have
recognised something of the auteur spirit in Lelouch's early cinematic
disasters. Whatever you may thnk of Lelouch's cinema, we can all
agree with his driving conviction that films are for
audiences, not critics.
Claude Lelouch was born in Paris, France, on 30th October 1937.
His father was an Algerian Jew, his mother a Catholic who adopted her
husband's religion. Lelouch's love of cinema sprang from a
dramatic incident in his childhood. During the Occupation, when he was four years old,
he and his mother were pursued across Paris by the German police.
They evaded capture by hiding in a crowded cinema, and this is where
Lelouch's lifelong love affair with cinema began. Not long after
he had obtained his baccalaureate, Lelouch gave up his studies and
began a career as a film journalist. His first notable work was
Quand le rideau se lève, a
report on everyday life in the Soviet Union, filmed without the
authorities' knowledge. It was whilst he was making this film
that Lelouch first saw Mikhaïl Kalatozov's film
The Cranes Are Flying (1957) and
instantly made up his mind to become a film director. With the
money he earned from this commission, he created his own film
production company in 1960 -
Les
Films 13 (thirteen being the number of letters in Lelouch's
name).
After making a series of short films about the French military for the
Service Cinématographique des Armées, Lelouch made his
directing debut in 1960 with
Le
Propre de l'homme. Lelouch was himself displeased with the
film and it was bound to be a critical and commercial disaster.
Whilst his next film,
L'Amour avec
des si (1962), was better received by the critics, his third
effort
La Femme spectacle was
banned on account of its flagrant misogynism. His first real
success was
Une fille et des fusils
(1964), an American-style thriller. It was whilst he was
preparing an aborted sequel to this film (
Les Grands moments) that Lelouch
first met Francis Lai, the composer who would become one of his closest
collaborators, scoring 31 of his films.
In a period of depression, Lelouch took a short break at the
coastal resort of Deauville. Here, the sight of a mother playing
with her child on the beach inflamed his imagination and inspired what
was to become his best-known film,
Un homme et une femme
(1966). A classic French love story distinguished only by its
virtuoso camerawork and dizzying patchwork composition, this film was a
worldwide hit and won not only the Palme d'Or at Cannes but also two
Oscars, for Best Screenplay and Best Foreign Language Film.
Francis Lai's love theme for the film, performed by Nicole Croisille
and Pierre Barouh, was a hit record the world over and became one of
the best-known sounds of the 1960s. The film also established the
international reputations of its two lead actors, Jean-Louis
Trintignant and Anouk Aimée, who were brought together by
Lelouch twenty years later for an ill-conceived sequel. At 29,
Claude Lelouch had become one of the most famous filmmakers of his
generation.
After this early success, Lelouch's filmmaking career was to be a continuing
succession of highs and lows. His next film,
Vivre pour vivre (1967), a more
mellow love story featuring Yves Montand and Annie Girardot, was
another global box office success, but his subsequent romance,
Un homme qui me plait (1969),
was a massive flop, even though it starred iconic actor Jean-Paul
Belmondo. In the first half of the 1970s, Lelouch was at his most
inspired and made three films that are considered among his best.
The first of these was
L'Aventure, c'est l'aventure
(1972), a wonderfully zany look at France's political and cultural
landscape in the aftermath of the May 68 uprisings against the
state. Thanks in part to the unlikely pairing of Lino Ventura
with Jacques Brel, this is one of Lelouch's most entertaining films and
has since become a cult favourite. This was followed by
La
Bonne Année (1973), a superlative mélange of
romance and heist movie featuring Ventura in one of his best-remembered
screen roles.
Toute une vie (1974) was the
first of Lelouch's grand generation-spanning epics, a somewhat more
palatable and better structured 20th century retrospective than the
director's subsequent
Les Uns et les autres (a.k.a.
Bolero) (1981).
Over the next decade, Claude Lelouch had no difficult attracting big
name actors - Michèle Morgan, Serge Reggiani, Brigitte
Fossey, James Caan, Catherine Deneuve and Charles Aznavour are just
some of the stars who were eager to appear in his films.
And whilst there were some notable successes -
Les Uns et les autres (1981),
Attention
bandits! (1986) and
Itinéraire d'un enfant
gâté (1988) - there were also some significant
failures -
À nous deux (1979), a
dull thriller-romance featuring Jacques Dutronc and Catherine Deneuve,
and
Édith et Marcel (1983),
a gloriously overblown account of the ill-fated love affair between
Édith Piaf and the boxer Marcel Cerdan. In the 1990s,
Lelouch's one major critical success was
Les Misérables (1995),
a genuinely inspired reinterpretation of Victor Hugo's famous novel,
set in Nazi occupied France. This film took the 1996 Golden Globe
for the Best Foreign Language Film and is among the director's most
highly regarded works. This was followed by another box
office success,
Hommes, femmes, mode d'emploi
(1996), which had a certain notoriety as it featured the disgraced
politician Bernard Tapie, just after he had served a prison sentence
for fraud.
Since 2000, Claude Lelouch retains his enthusiasm for filmmaking but is
finding it more difficult to attract an audience. He was forced
to abondon his ambitious three-part
Le
Genre humain project after the first part bombed at the box
office in 2004. More recently,
Roman
de gare (2007), a stylish thriller starring Fanny Ardant and
Dominique Pinon, garnered positive reviews and did well on both sides
of the Atlantic. However, Lelouch's latest film,
Ces amours-là (2010), a
flimsy musical and cinematic fantasia, has been far less
well-received. Lelouch's cinema may not be to everyone's taste,
but you have to admire someone who can keep going, driven by his sheer
love of cinema and undeterred by the critics' sniping and the
occasional box office misfire.
© James Travers 2012
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