Film Review
Michel Drach's adaptation of Claire Etcherelli's award winning novel
Élise ou la vraie vie proved
to be one of the most controversial French films in a decade when it
was released in 1970. The lost war in Algeria was a sore point
for most French people and consequently racism, of the ugliest kind,
was endemic in every stratum of society. Drach was one of the
first filmmakers in France to tackle head-on the issue of xenophobia
and to directly reference the war in Algeria. Predictably the film
provoked something of a feeding frenzy in the popular press. A
film in which an ordinary working class French woman falls in love with
an FLN-supporting Algerian immigrant was never going to be an easy sell but the film's
notoriety ensured than it did not pass unnoticed. In fact the
healthy box office receipts may have surpassed even Drach's
expectations.
Although he made only about a dozen films and is barely remembered
today, Michel Drach was one of the most important militant filmmakers
of his day. His subsequent
Le Pull-over rouge (1979)
successfully argued the case for the abolition of the death penalty in
France and helped galvanise the movement for change which brought an
end to capital punishment (decapitation by guillotine) in
1981. In
Élise ou
la vraie vie, Drach is just as effective in his condemnation of
racial intolerance, without resorting to the strident tones that other
filmmakers, notably Jean-Luc Godard, employed in their politically
minded films.
In a similar vein to Rainer Fassbinder's
Fear Eats the Soul (1974)
(which tells a similar story of miscegenous love in a bigoted world),
Élise ou la vraie vie
treats the subject of racism from a humanist perspective, portraying it
as a social malaise that demeans the perpetrator more than it degrades
the victim. This is most evident in the shocking sequence in
which Arezki, the main Algerian protagonist, is strip searched by
French police. Arezki is humiliated but his persecutors are show
to be barely human, a disgrace to both their profession and their
country.
Understated yet captivating performances from the leads,
Marie-José Nat (Drach's talented actress wife) and Mohamed
Chouikh, bring a subtle poignancy that heightens the authenticity and
poetry of the film. Brutal in its uncompromising realism and lack
of sentimentality,
Élise ou
la vraie vie makes a statement that still resonates loudly,
and will continue to do so whilst we allow the scourge of racism to
disfigure our society.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Michel Drach film:
Le Passé simple (1977)
Film Synopsis
It is 1957 and France has been at war with Algeria for three
years. Elise, a young woman in her early twenties, live in
Bordeaux with her family in a cramped apartment. Money is short,
so, on a whim, she heads off to Paris to seek help from her brother,
Lucien. The latter has no spare cash but suggests that Elise can
easily make some money at the car factory where he works. Sure
enough, Elise is offered a job at the factory, as a quality inspector,
but the work is strenuous and the workplace, a noisy production line,
infernal. Most of the employees at the factory are North African
immigrants and Elise is appalled by the way in which they are treated
by their French foreman and co-workers, who are all openly
racist. When one of the workers, an Algerian man named Arezki, is
forbidden from leaving the factory floor when he has a headache, Elise
gives him aspirin. To show his gratitude, Arezki makes her a
present of two croissants and invites her to have a drink with him to
celebrate his birthday. Elise's sympathy for the Algerian soon
grows into a stronger emotion, love. A supporter of the movement
for Algerian independence, Arezki risks being arrested or expelled from
France and Elise becomes increasingly anxious for his safety...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.