Film Review
For more than thirty years, writer-director Bertrand Blier has been
busy hacking his way through the undergrowth of middleclass morality,
proving himself the worthiest claimant of that well-worn title, the
Enfant Terrible of French cinema. Blier's deep fascination for
the darkier, seedier aspects of human experience has allowed him to
craft some of the most provocative and original films of the past few
decades, even if some of them seem to be contrived primarily to arouse
the bourgeois prejudices of the less liberal-minded critics and to give
his distributors recurring nightmares.
Beau-père is Blier's most
unashamedly controversial film, one that tackles, with rare frankness
and maturity, the two great taboos of our age: incest and
paedophilia. One of the reasons why the film is so shocking in
retrospect is the ease with which it manages to get the spectator to suspend his or her
moral judgement and see that a liaison between a thirty-year old man
and a teenage girl can be both tragic and beautiful, not
merely morally repugnant.
Adapting his own novel (as he previously did on his hit debut feature
Les
Valseuses), Bertrand Blier tacitly avoids the sensationalist
trap that director Adrian Lyne would fall into with his scandalous
Lolita (1997), which treads similar
ground far more clumsily. Instead, he paints a delicate portrait
of illicit love that is devoid of both moral judgement and exploitative
gimmickry.
Beau-père
is not the most comfortable film to watch, as it broaches themes
which fill most of us with revulsion, but Blier's handling of his
subject matter is so nuanced and intelligent, the performances from the
two principals so engaging and truthful, that it stands as the
director's most compelling and incisive works. It is not the role
of art to kowtow to the narrow confines of contemporary morality, but
rather to open our eyes and help us to see a little further than our
natural prejudices will allow - in this the film succeeds admirably.
Even with Blier's flair for intelligent screenwriting,
Beau-père would still have
been a hard-sell were it not for the extraordinarily rich performances
from the two leads, Patrick Dewaere and Ariel Besse. As the
burned out musician whose paedophilic tendencies are all too evident
(albeit subtly rendered), Dewaere retains our sympathies by virtue of
the tragic poignancy he invests in his character. His character
is not an evil pervert, but a weak man whose lack of moral fibre and
sense of adult responsibility make him easy prey for the precocious
teenage girl whom Fate has thrown into his arms. If
anything, it is Dewaere's character Rémi who is the victim of
the piece, the one we end up having more sympathy for. Ariel
Besse's Marion, a modern Lolita who sees absolutely nothing wrong in
luring her guardian into an unseemly love affair, would likewise have
been deserving of our censure had it not been for the skill with which
the actress displays her character's feelings and motivations.
Hard to believe that this was Besse's screen debut, and perhaps even
harder to believe that she gave up acting after two subsequent films
and now works as a postmistress. As for Dewaere, he committed
suicide (for reasons which are still unaccounted for), within a year of
working on this film, a tragic end to the most promising of acting
careers. The film's other notable actor, Maurice Ronet, would
also die before his time, from cancer in 1983 - his portrayal
here is poignantly reminiscent of the one he gave in Louis Malle's
Le
Feu follet (1963).
Beau-père is a film
that could only have been made in France in the early 1980s, when
attitudes towards illicit sex were far more relaxed than they are
today. Even then, the film was ill-received in some quarters and
had difficulty finding a distributor in some countries, most notably
the United States. In France, the film was widely praised by the
critics and proved to be a surprising commercial success, attracting an
audience of over one million. It was nominated for the Palme d'Or
at Cannes in 1981 and earned Patrick Dewaere his fifth nomination for
the Best Actor César in 1982 (an award which sadly eluded the
actor). Today, the issue of paedophilia is such a sensitive one
that no director would dare to make a film like this (and even if he
did the likelihood is that no distributor would touch it). What
does this say about the health of today's film industry - that avenues
of human life are excluded because they are deemed just too socially
and morally unacceptable to risk putting in front of an audience?
Beau-père is certainly
a challenging film, one that tackles a modern taboo with compassion and
a breathtaking directness, but is it not far better to be cognizant of
the situation that it depicts than merely to shut our eyes and pretend
that such things do not happen? Ignorance may be bliss, but it
does not necessarily make us better or wiser people.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Bertrand Blier film:
La Femme de mon pote (1983)