Film Review
Of all Michel Deville's films,
Benjamin ou les Mémoires d'un puceau
is the one that most readily evokes the spirit of the era in which it was made,
on the eve of that momentous spring of 1968.
The film was not only a hit with the critics (it won the
prestigious Prix Louis-Delluc in 1967), it was also phenomenally
successful with the French public, attracting an audience of just over
2.5 million. In exuberant style, the film concludes the first
phase of Deville's career as a filmmaker, the last in a series of
light-hearted comedies which began with his first hit
Ce soir ou jamais (1961).
From this point on, Deville's work would become increasingly dark and
critical in tone, with none of the sunny insouciance that brightens his
early work.
Working with his long-term collaborator Nina Companéez, Deville
crafts a libertine fairytale that has about it the elegance,
playfulness and subtle subversiveness of a Beaumarchais play from the
18th century, the decadent era in which the film is set. The warm
pastel shades of the luxuriant costumes and set interiors are in
perfect harmony with the resplendent greens of the summery garden
exteriors, beautifully photographed by Ghislain Cloquet in a way that
immediately instils in the spectator a sense of well-being.
Benjamin ou les Mémoires d'un puceau
is as much a treat for the soul as it is for the eyes - a sensual,
feel-good piece that is effortlessly enchanting. It is like a
Jacques Demy musical without the music.
For what would be his most ambitious film, Deville assembled a
glittering ensemble of talent which adds to the film's enjoyment value
and doubtless contributed to the film's popularity.
Michèle Morgan, an icon of French cinema in the 1930s and 40s,
has never looked more beautiful, nor more tragic and alluring, as she
does here, the queen (or rather Countess) of a fairytale palace who
pines for a love that can never be hers. The rogue she has had
the misfortune to fall for is none other than Michel Piccoli, the
perfect choice of actor to personify the aristocratic debauchery of the
18th century. At the other end of the moral spectrum, Pierre
Clémenti brings the requisite innocence and gauche charm to his
portrayal of the titular doe-eyed Benjamin, constantly amusing as he
ambles through a latterday Garden of Eden with a fixed expression of
bewilderment on his face, unsure what to make of the swarm of buxom
Eves who keep thrusting apples and other fruit in his direction.
Of these exquisite Eves the most eye-catching is Catherine Deneuve, the
archetypal ice princess whose unrivalled beauty has lured many a
fictional hero to his doom. When she first appears in this film,
Deneuve is seen, apparently imprisoned, in a large bird cage which
serves to protect her from her lusting admirers. In truth, her
character turns out to be the most liberated, whereas the men who chase
after her are the ones who are trapped, slaves to their primal
passions. Like its central protagonist,
Benjamin ou les Mémoires d'un puceau
proves to be not quite so pure and innocent as it first seems.
Beneath the colouful whimsy and tasteful bedroom chicanery there is an
obvious pro-feminist agenda. It is, after all, a woman who gets
to write the last entry in Benjamin's 'diary of a virgin'...
© James Travers 2013
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Next Michel Deville film:
Bye bye, Barbara (1969)
Film Synopsis
France, 1750. Benjamin has spent his entire childhood and early adolescence
in the sole company of his tutor Camille. Now that he is 17, he must
go to live with his aunt and uncle, two wealthy aristocrats, at the château
de Valandry. When he arrives at his aunt's estate, Benjamin is as pure
as a boy of his age can be and his relatives' libertine lifestyle comes as
a surprise to him. Fortunately for him, there is an abundance of attractive
young women who are more than willing to help him make the transition from
boyhood to manhood. After all, it is the duty of those who know to
teach those who know not. It amuses Benjamin that his uncle should
throw over his wife and go chasing after a younger woman, Anne.
Amid the wild revelry of a party, Anne offers herself to Benjamin to complete
his initiation in the ways of love - before she takes the count as her husband.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.