Film Review
Were it not for its prestigious cast and a remarkable performance from
its lead actress,
Docteur
Françoise Gailland would be a hard sell,
a virtual parody of those tears-and-fears hospital dramas that came into vogue in the 1970s and
never seemed to go away. This was probably the nadir of director
Jean-Louis Bertucelli's short filmmaking career (he later had more
success making TV movies and series for French television) and yet,
despite its obvious shortcomings (not least of which is a superabundance of
tacky clichés, of both the script and directorial variety) the
film holds up surprisingly well, and does so almost entirely on the
strength of Annie Girardot's powerhouse performance. Watching
Girardot in this film is a brutal experience, not just because her
portrayal is so convincing, but because it conveys something we can all
relate to, the necessity of putting one's house in order to achieve a
meaningful existence. Things only go awry when the manhandled
plot contrivances start to get in the way and the melodrama goes into overdrive.
This is the film that won Annie Giradot her Best Actress César
in 1977 - her only win in this category, although she did subsequently
pick up the Best Supporting Actress César for her
performances in Claude Lelouch's
Les Misérables (1995)
and Michael Haneke's
La Pianiste (2001).
In the 1970s, Giradot acquired a reputation for playing strong-willed career
women who were both resilient and sensitive, the humane face of
France's feminist movement. This is why the part of
Françoise Gailland suits her so well, so well that it allows her
to give what is probably her most sympathetic screen performance. You'd have
to have a heart of stone not to be moved by her character's reaction to
the news that she has a life-threatening cancerous growth, and there
are some equally powerful moments throughout the film. The
surfeit of acting talent that surrounds Girardot - Jean-Pierre Cassel,
François Périer, Isabelle Huppert, Suzanne Flon - may
have helped to sell the film, but it is pretty superfluous. Annie
Girardot monopolises our attention from the moment she first appears on
the screen, and she does doesn't release us from her spell until the
end credits roll. Half a decade on, Girardot and Cassel were
reunited by director Moshé Mizrahi for
another romantic entanglement in
La Vie continue (1981).
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the course of her career, Françoise Gailland has earned
herself a reputation as a formidable medical practitioner, highly
respected at the Paris hospital where she works. But this
professional success has come at a price. She has neglected her
family, to the extent that she is virtually estranged from her husband
and teenage children. When she is diagnosed with lung cancer,
Françoise decides to set the record straight, whilst she still
has time...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.