Film Review
The contrast between the styles of the French New Wave and the old
guard of quality French filmmakers is brought into sharp relief when
one compares this 1960 film from Julien Duvivier with François
Truffaut's contemporaneous
Les 400 coups.
Both films star the young Jean-Pierre Léaud (who could be
described as the Marlon Brando of French cinema) playing a rebellious adolescent with a knack of getting
himself into trouble, and both are set in a renascent Paris that has
finally shaken off the yoke of post-war gloom and austerity.
Beyond that, the films could hardly be more different.
The spontaneity and raw authenticity which Truffaut
brings to his film are far less discernible in Duvivier's.
Boulevard is made according to the
old rules - polished performances, a conventional narrative and a
cinematographic approach which had hardly changed since the
1930s. The film is technically well made, but in comparison with
Truffaut's, it fairly soulless, never attaining the emotional
impact of
Les 400 coups.
It doesn't help that most of the characters in the film are the most grotesque
stereotypes, including a shrewish step-mother that looks like something
Hans Christian Andersen created and a pair of Parisian artists who clearly
never missed a day at the Quentin Crisp school of in-your-face campness.
Immaculately coiffeured and tidily dressed, Jean-Pierre Léaud
resembles a sanitised version of the Antoine Doinel character he played
in Truffaut's film. You can imagine the difficulties Duvivier
must have had in trying to control Léaud and get him to
deliver a "conventional" performance. The actor looks as if he
has been hermetically sealed in a straitjacket for much of the film.
It is no surprise that the bulk of his film work for the next
decade or so would be for the New Wave directors whose innovative style
matched perfectly his expressive, idiosyncratic approach to
acting. Interestingly, the part of the boxer Dicky was
originally offered to the virtually unknown young actor Jean-Paul
Belmondo, but he declined and instead chose to work on Jean-Luc Godard's
A bout de souffle,
a wise move as it turned out.
Boulevard serves to show
how out-of-touch and out-of-date the old guard filmmakers were becoming and
how much French cinema needed of a shot of revitalisation.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Julien Duvivier film:
La Chambre ardente (1962)
Film Synopsis
Driven away from home by his shrewish stepmother, 15-year-old Jojo finds
a place to live by himself, a tiny garret room overlooking the Place Pigalle.
When he is not worrying about money, which he finds hard to come by, Jojo
thinks only of women, which for some reason have acquired a sudden fascination
for him. He is particularly interested in Jenny, a striptease artist
in a nearby nightclub, but she treats him like a child and already has a
boyfriend, a boxer named Jimmy. After this first disappointment in
love Jojo contemplates suicide but then he finds he has a friend in Marietta,
a girl nearer his own age. Jojo's saga of misfortune ends when his
stepmother goes away, allowing him to patch things up with his father.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.