Film Review
Director Claude Autant-Lara was no stranger to controversy by the time
he came to make this, his last great film, in the late 1950s.
Earlier in the decade, he had ruffled more than a few establishment
feathers with such films as
L'Auberge Rouge (1951),
Le
Blé en herbe (1953) and
La Traversée de Paris (1956),
all of which dared to poke fun at the self-serving institutions and
hypocritical bourgeois milieu which the director so thoroughly
despised.
Le Blé en
herbe was particularly controversial for its portrayal of an
illicit relationship between a teenage boy and a middle-aged
woman. After the firestorm of feeling which this film ignited,
you would have thought Autant-Lara would have learned his lesson.
But no, six years on,
En cas de
malheur featured an equally provocative cross-generation
relationship involving a respectable 50-year-old man and a wild
temptress who is less than half his age. Autant-Lara inflamed
matters further by his decision to cast Jean Gabin, a highly regarded
serious film actor and mainstay of French cinema, with Brigitte Bardot,
a recently established sex kitten whose colourful private life was
seldom out of the papers. The famous shot in which Bardot runs
past Gabin in her birthday suit has become a part of French film legend
and, from the reaction shot which follows, it is clear that Autant-Lara
was fully aware of the impact it would have.
By 1958, things had changed somewhat since
Le Blé en herbe had caused
France's less liberally minded critics to choke to death on their own
bile. Roger Vadim's
Et Dieu... créa la femme
(1956) - the film that had made Bardot an overnight international sex
goddess - had revolutionised the portrayal of sex in the cinema, and
within a few years audiences and critics were far more relaxed about
depictions of the seamier side of human relationships. What made
En cas de malheur so shocking was
not its overt sexuality (the raunchy love scenes involving Bardot and
Italian heartthrob Franco Interlenghi were daring for the time but
ludicrously tame by today's standards), but rather its iconoclastic
conclusion - that a respectable pillar of the community could throw
over his career and his marriage so that he could take up with a
conscienceless floozy young enough to be his daughter. Did the
right-wing invective spouters note that the relationship was portrayed
sympathetically, as one founded on genuine affection rather
than on mutual exploitation? No, the film's detractors saw only
what they wanted to see - a flagrant affront to middleclass morality of
the most repugnant kind.
En
cas de malheur was, in their eyes, perverse and immoral; in
fact, it is one of the most progressive and humane French films of the
decade.
Today, you can't help wondering what all the fuss was about. May
to December relationships of the kind depicted in the film are no
longer a sensation and are generally accepted without comment, and not
only for superrich film stars. Whilst it is difficult to imagine
what impact
En cas de malheur
had when it was first seen in 1958, it is much easier to appreciate its
artistic strengths. A highly respectable adaptation of a Georges
Simenon novel, the film is as well-directed as any of Autant-Lara's
other great films and offers some memorable performances from a
top-notch cast. Brigitte Bardot had no shortage of job offers
during her brief but glorious period of stardom, but rarely did she
have the opportunity to prove herself as an actress. It was only
by working with directors as talented and demanding as Claude
Autant-Lara that she was able to show that she could act, and act well
if the part was sufficiently interesting and well-developed.
Bardot's performance in
En cas de
malheur is one of her career highpoints, surpassed only by her
superb turn in Jean-Luc Godard's
Le Mépris (1963).
Jean Gabin's contribution is no less impressive and there is not a
scene in the film in which we are given cause to doubt the intensity
and integrity of his character's feelings for his flighty young
mistress. Edwige Feuillère turns in the most poignant
performance as the devoted wife who must somehow come to terms with her
husband's infatuation for someone she can only despise, and Franco
Interlenghi spices things up with his slightly disturbing portrayal of
the hot-blooded beau who ends up as Gabin's deadly rival.
Forty years later, the film was remade as
En
plein coeur (1998) by Pierre Jolivet, with Gérard
Lanvin and Virginie Ledoyen in the lead roles. Needless to say,
this remake, competently realised as it is, doesn't even come close to
matching the brilliance of the original, which is now considered a
classic of French cinema and one of Claude Autant-Lara's finest
films. After
En cas de malheur,
Autant-Lara's career would show a marked and irreversible
decline. His reputation tarnished by his association with extreme
right-wing politics and by unforgiving critics who failed to comprehend his
contribution to French cinema in the 1940s and 50s, the director died
as he had lived, with a rage in his heart.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Claude Autant-Lara film:
Le Joueur (1958)