Film Review
In the twilight of her illustrious career, the author Colette was
actively engaged in adapting some of her most famous novels for the
cinema, as well as the work of other writers such as Vicki Baum (for
Marc Allégret's
Lac aux dames).
Chéri and
La Fin de Chéri, two of her
most popular novels of the 1920s, were condensed into a stylish Belle
Époque melodrama with Colette providing the dialogue that
instantly transports the spectator into her distinctive world of
brittle dreams and delicate romances. Of the films that Colette
lent her talents to,
Chéri
is the one that is most redolent of her written works. It is a
film that breathes the name 'Colette' in almost every frame.
Pierre Billon is a surprising choice to direct the film, although he
had previously distinguished himself with a series of memorable period
dramas that included
Vautrin
(1944) and
Ruy Blas (1948). He is
probably better known for his darker dramas with a film noir feel,
films such as
L'Homme au chapeau rond (1946)
and
Jusqu'au dernier (1957), which
could not be further from the sweetly perfumed salons of Colette's
Belle Époque Paris. Billon's main contribution is to give
a darker undercurrent to Colette's original story, with a flashback
structure and melancholic tone (emphasised by the carousel-like music
constantly audible in the background) that anticipate the tragic
outcome. In film noir fashion, you can feel the world closing in
on the main protagonist Chéri as his dreams turn to dust and he
realises that there is no escape from the hopeless infatuation that has
taken him prisoner.
Framed almost as a piece of theatre, the film's success rests on the
quality of the performances, and this proves to be the film's strongest
suit. On the face of it, Jean Desailly seems an unlikely
candidate for the role of Chéri - it is far easier to imagine an
actor with a more Valentino-like allure for the part, someone like
Louis Jourdan or Georges Guétary. But as he demonstrated
in his best-known role, the unfaithful husband in Truffaut's
La
Peau douce (1964), Desailly is at his best when playing weak
men who, easily dominated by women, become prey to overpowering
romantic impulses. In
Chéri,
Desailly turns in one of his best screen performances, one that is a
remarkably poignant testimony to the destructive power of love.
Marcelle Chantal is equally impressive in her last film appearance, her
portrayal of Chéri's beloved Léa being an unsettling but
tragic conflation of maternal affection and amorous yearning. In
the supporting cast, Jane Marken and Marcelle Derrien are both
excellent, but the performance that leaves the strongest impression is
that of Yvonne de Bray, the most charismatic French actress of them
all. Far from being wasted in a secondary role, de Bray very
nearly steals the film as a decrepit prostitute (referred to as 'la
Copine') whose own tragic circumstances provide a wistful leitmotif for
the main drama. In 2009, Stephen Frears directed a big budget
remake of the film, with Michelle Pfeiffer as Léa and Rupert
Friend as Chéri - glossier it may be, but it doesn't have the
eerie poetry and velvet-lined bleakness of Billon's unjustly overlooked
version.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Paris, at the time of the Belle Époque... Known to his
female admirers as Chéri, Fred Peloux is the son of the
high-class courtesan Charlotte Peloux and spends most of his time in
the company of his mother's friends, all fading prostitutes. One
of the latter, Léa, becomes his first lover, and despite the
difference in their ages, their affair lasts several years. When
Fred begins to lose interest in Léa, he is forced by his mother
into marrying a woman of his own age, Edmée, even though he has
no feelings for her. The marriage turns out to be a disaster and
it isn't long before Fred is pining for Léa, the only woman he
is capable of loving...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.