Film Review
Six years after Antoine Doinel appeared in the
Antoine et Colette segment of the
compendium film
L'Amour à vingt ans (1962), François Truffaut
felt the time was right to resurrect his famous alter ego, who first saw the light of
day in
Les Quatre cents coups (1959).
By this time, Jean-Pierre Léaud, the young actor who played Antoine in these two
earlier films, had established himself as an actor in France, most notably for his appearance
in Jean-Luc Godard's film
La Chinoise (1967).
By the time
Baisers volés
was made, Léaud had developed his own personality - a mixture of unpredictable
rebel, loveable good-for-nothing and womanising scamp - which was perfectly in tune
with Truffaut's vision of the Doinel character.
In
Baisers volés, Truffaut continues to use Doinel to relate incidents from
his own life, most notably his terrible experiences in the army. In 1951, after
having absconded without leave, a 19 year old François Truffaut was arrested
for desertion. He spent several gruelling months in a German prison before being
offered a dishonourable discharge.
In stark contrast to the elegiac poignancy of
Les Quatres cents coups and the emotional
intensity of
Jules et Jim (1962),
Baisers volés is a much lighter film,
a sentimental romantic comedy about a young man finding his feet (and constantly tripping
up) in an adult world. The film's title comes from a line in Charles Trenet's song
Que reste-il de nos amours? which is also used as the film's signature tune.
This is a film which also manages to capture the mood of the time it was made. The
year 1968 has a special significance in the recent history of France. The student
demonstrations and general strikes that year shook the de Gaulle government to its foundations
and resulted in a burgeoning youth culture. Although Truffaut sympathised with these
events, he never directly reflected them in his films, unlike his contemporaries.
Despite that, there is an air of quiet subversion which runs through
Baisers volés
(and indeed the subsequent two Doinel films).
One major political event which marked Truffaut at the time he was making this film was
the decision by the French government to remove Henri Langlois from his post as director
of the Cinémathèque Française. Truffaut leant his support to
the outcry from well-known actors and directors to have Langlois re-instated, and this
meant he had less time than he planned to direct this film
. Truffaut dedicated
Baisers volés to Langlois, and indeed the opening shot takes us right
up to the doors of the Musée du cinéma in Paris, appropriately closed for
business.
Truffaut believed that
Baisers volés would fail at the box office because
of the distraction caused by the Langlois affair. He was wrong. This proved
to be his most successful film in France since
Les Quatre cents coups, and it was
a surprising success in the United States. Truffaut was by now so attached to
his Doinel character that he re-used him in two subsequent films,
Domicile conjugal (1970)
and
L'Amour en fuite (1979).
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next François Truffaut film:
La Sirène du Mississippi (1969)
Film Synopsis
Antoine Doinel is twenty when he is discharged from the army for his frequent
lapses of discipline. Returning to Paris he hopes to resume his former
love affair with Christine Darbon but he has difficulty adjusting to civilian
life once more. He gets a job as a night porter in a hotel but is summarily
dismissed when he chances on an adulterous affair. This leads him to
be recruited by a private detective agency, and his first mission is to follow
a magician with a dubious love life. After he bungles this assignment,
Antoine next finds himself working for Monsieur Tabbard, the owner of a shoe
shop who is convinced that the whole world is against him, in particular
his wife. Tabbard's fears appear justified when Antoine falls head
over heels in love with his wife. Meanwhile, Christine is being trailed
wherever she goes by a suspicious looking stranger. Antoine Doinel's
sentimental education is only just beginning...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.