Film Review
Every release of a Michel Deville film invites the same question: which
magic trick has this fanciful and unpredictable director prepared for
us this time? Of course we have already loved
Adorable
menteuse (1962),
À cause à cause d'une femme
(1963) and
Lucky Jo (1964), but after
Benjamin
ou les memoires d'un puceau (1967) the critics and public
are expecting nothing less than a miracle. On the 26/3/69,
Bye bye, Barbara, a mixture of
crime-thriller and psychological drama, was foisted by Deville on a
divided Parisian audience. The title refers to the song blasting from a
juke box at the beginning of the film. Its is performed by Nina
Companeez, Deville's partner at the time and faithful screenwriter.
In every one of their film collaborations, the familiar delicacy of the
Deville-Companeez partnership always evokes passion in at least one of
its manifest guises. Deville's idea of passion may be sunny,
playful, feverish or simply romantic, but in this shady, sophisticated
and disturbing piece of work, passion takes on a dark and perverse
hue.
Bye bye, Barbara
starts as a comedy, develops into an opera and ends as a cynical
fairytale.
As he showed throughout his career, Michel Deville is a virtuoso of the
camera and his elegant direction, which is full of contrasts and subtle
undertones, is a fusion of coolness and mystery with a casual
lightness. Claude Lecomte's colour photography is beautifully
expressive and in total harmony with the narrative composition. A
stunning region in the south west of France and then Paris provide
exquisite backdrops for the unfolding drama, enhanced by the lush
musical score written by the singer-composer Jean-Jacques Debout, an
artist who wrote songs for Johnny Hallyday and Sylvie Vartan, to name
just a few.
As ever, Deville selects his cast with meticulous precision and each of
his actors turns in an understated performance that brims with feeling
and meaning. Italian Lolita and cover girl Ewa Swann plays the
melancholic and frightened Paula, the central character in the tangled
intrigue. Philippe Avron, a fine actor of stage and screen
previously seen in René Clair's final film
Les Fêtes galantes (1965), is
suitably cast as the colourful journalist Jerôme Thomas. In
what is the only leading role of his career, Avron plays a not-so
charismatic seducer that is slightly evocative of Jean-Paul
Belmondo.
In addition to these impeccable leads, the cast contains several
familiar names, most notably Bruno Cremer, a perfect choice for the
role of the diabolical god of show biz, Hugo Michelli. En route
from her New Wave unveiling to international stardom, Canadian actress
Alexandra Stewart excels in the part of Eve, Michelli's dominant and
possessive mistress. First seen in Alain Jessua's
Jeu de massacre (1967), Michel
Duchaussoy plays the part of Thomas's obliging friend Dimitri - he
would later become one of Claude Chabrol's favourite actors, starting
with
Que la bête meure
(1969). The supporting cast includes Anny Duperey at the start of
an honourable career and Yves Brainville.
Bye bye, Barbara may be a
modest affair compared with Michel Deville's other great achievements,
but it is nonetheless well worth seeing, if only to complete your
appreciation of one of the more distinctive and original French
filmmakers to emerge and flourish during the French New Wave era.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
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Next Michel Deville film:
L'Ours et la poupée (1969)
Film Synopsis
Jérôme Tomas is a sportswriter who is covering an important
rugby match in Biarritz when, one evening, he enters a bar and encounters
a strange young woman dressed in white. With the sound of the record
'Bye Bye Barbara' ringing in his ears Jérôme realises at once
that he is in love with this mysterious woman, who introduces herself as
Paula. She is in a confused state, as if something serious is preying
on her mind, and Jérôme agrees to take her back to his home
in Paris. It is only later that the sportswriter discovers that Paula
is the stepdaughter of the wealthy impresario Hugo Michelli. Jérôme
becomes concerned when the unfathomable woman suddenly goes missing, and
then he reads in a newspaper that she was killed in a road accident.
Convinced that something is seriously amiss, he begins his own investigation
in an attempt to unravel the mystery that was Paula...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.