Film Review
One of the film directors to earn distinction whilst France was under
Nazi Occupation was Claude Autant-Lara, a former set and costume
designer who, after a long and difficult apprenticeship, finally found
recognition with a string of high class melodrama in the 1940s.
Although Autant-Lara's reputation was tarnished by
certain critics in the 1950s and 60s, much of his work exemplifies the best of the
quality tradition in French cinema. Of the films that Autant-Lara
made during the Occupation, the one that has stood the test of time
best is
Douce, the director's
most perfectly crafted film and his most virulent critique of the haute
bourgeoisie. Although the story is set in the 19th Century, the
film is obviously intended as an attack on the social divisions that
prevailed in France in the 1940s, divisions which were somewhat exacerbated by the Occupation.
Not only was Autant-Lara one of the most accomplished filmmakers of his
generation, consistently delivering films of exceptional visual and
emotional power, he was also one of the most subversive. In many
of his films, he forcefully conveys his deep-seated antipathy for the
supposed bulwarks of French society.
Douce is a good illustrations of
this - a no holds barred assault on class distinction. The
film opens with a sequence which makes the Church (another of the
director's bêtes noires) complicit in the bourgeois notion that
the classes should be kept apart. In the scene that follow, the
class roles are reversed (Irène initially appears to be Douce's
social superior), although this turns out to be a ploy (to establish
that Irène is a social climber and identify Douce as someone who
plans to marry beneath her). After this sleight of hand, the
class barriers come slamming down and we know exactly to which social stratum
the characters belong. It is as if there is a fundamental law of
nature that prevents the different castes from mixing. Given that
Autant-Lara was ill-disposed towards the Occupation (he refused to work
for Continental, the German run company that dominated French cinema at
the time), it is tempting to read into the film a subtle condemnation
of the Nazis' obsession with racial purity.
Perhaps the most important character in
Douce is the grand house within
which most of the action takes place. This setting
doesn't only reveal the material gulf that exists between the two classes
that inhabit it, the masters and their servants, it also provides a
stifling sense of confinement, a sense of the immutability of one's own
place in society. The characters are defined less by what they
say and more by how they relate to this setting, the camera angles
revealing the shifting hierarchy within the household. In several
shots, the characters are seen through doors or windows, and so it
becomes clear that what we thought was their home is in fact a prison,
one that becomes increasingly claustrophobic as the social divide
become more evident. There are no free individuals in this world
- everyone is a prisoner, a stereotype who must adhere to the social
conventions or else pay the price (death or banishment). Again,
the fact that
Douce was made
under the Occupation may have given this impression a greater
resonance.
Although
Douce excels
in many areas (Philippe Agostini's
cinematography adds to both the beauty of the film's visual composition and
its intensely oppressive mood), its real power derives from the script.
This was supplied by one of French cinema's most successful writing
teams, Jean Aurenche and Pierre Bost, their second collaboration after
the Fernandel comedy
L'Héritier
des Mondésir (1940). In lesser hands, Michel
Davet's novel could have ended up as a trite melodrama. Instead,
Aurenche and Bost make it into a complex study in thwarted ambition and
desire, with well-rounded characters whose motives are not immediately
discernible and an intricate plot that easily holds our attention. The
dramatic tension is periodically lightened by a generous helping of the
writers' famous dark humour - notice the cheeky references to Choderlos
de Laclos'
Les Liaisons dangereuses
and the not very subtle variation on the "Let them eat cake"
saying. After this sterling effort, Aurenche and Bost would
work with Autant-Lara on many of his subsequent films, including such
memorable classics as
Le Diable au corps (1947),
L'Auberge
rouge (1951),
Le Rouge et le noir (1954) and
La Traversée de Paris
(1956).
Heading a distinguished cast is Odette Joyeux, who had previously
starred in Autant-Lara's
Le Mariage
de Chiffon (1942) and
Lettres
d'amour (1942). As the ill-fated Douce, Joyeux gives what
is probably the finest performance in her short career, her gamine
persona lending her a tragic vulnerability that makes her the film's
most sympathetic character. Providing a perfect contrast
with Joyeux's innocent and impulsive Douce is Madeleine Robinson's
calculating social climber Irène - both characters are
convincingly played as victims of a cruel social structure that
inhibits them and prevents them from fulfilling their dreams.
Note that whilst Douce and Irène actively fight against the
system that holds them in check, their male counterparts, the Count de
Bonafé and his estate manager Fabien, look like passive
bystanders, not merely powerless to change the status quo, but also
seemingly reluctant to do so. It is interesting that in many of
Autant-Lara's films the female characters tend to be the strongest and
more proactive, whilst the men are often weak or lacking in moral
conviction. An extreme example of this in
Douce is the elderly harridan
Madame de Bonafé, superbly portrayed by Marguerite Moreno at her
feistiest. Looking like Cerberus guarding the gates to the haute
bourgeoisie, Moreno's character is a patronising ogress that
epitomises the cancerous social divide which Autant-Lara riled
against in his films. The film's pessimistic ending shows the
folly of class prejudice but offers little hope that things will ever
change for the better. Cerberus is too well-fed,
égalité the one luxury the rich cannot afford.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Claude Autant-Lara film:
Sylvie et le fantôme (1946)
Film Synopsis
Paris, 1887. Engelbert de Bonafé is a wealthy man who lives
in a splendid house with his hard-to-please mother, the Countess de Bonafé,
and his 17-year-old daughter Douce, whose name reflects her gentle personality.
Unbeknown to her over-attentive father, Douce is hopelessly infatuated with
his handsome steward, Fabien Marani, and dreams of eloping with him to get
married. Unfortunately, it is not the childish Douce that Fabien loves
but the girl's private tutor, Irène. The latter owes her present
position to Fabien, and he hopes that she will repay his kindness one day
by accompanying him to North America to begin a new life. Irène
has her own plans, however.
A determined social climber, Irène offers no resistance when Monsieur
de Bonafé begins making romantic overtures towards her. Now
that she looks set to marry into wealth, she can afford to spurn her devoted
Fabien. Rejected by his one true love, Fabien becomes easy prey for
the persistently enamoured Douce, who promises to give up everything so that
she can become his wife. Aware that by marrying Douce he will be inflicting
a just chastisement on his employer for robbing him of his sweetheart, Fabien
consents and the two are soon planning a new life together in a distant land.
They might have lived happily ever after if Fate hadn't been so cruel as
to intervene, delivering a blow that will shortly ruin the lives of everyone
in the de Bonafé household...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.