Film Review
With two respectable crime dramas under his belt -
Dernier
atout (1942) and
Goupi mains rouges (1943) -
director Jacques Becker made a surprising detour for his third feature,
into the perfumed salons of Parisian haute couture.
Falbalas could easily have been
just another routine melodrama, but Becker's fascination with the
darker side of human nature, in particular that innate quality that we
all have for delusion and self-destruction, led him to make a far more
interesting and disturbing film, about the destructive potency of an
amorous infatuation. Daring for its time, the film was not
as well received by critics and audiences as it might have been
on its first release.
Since, it has come to be judged far more favourably and represents
something of a milestone in French cinema, marking the
transition from the poetic realism of the 1930s to the grittier
realism of the post-war era.
It helps that the film is impeccably cast, with Raymond Rouleau giving
the performance of his career as the seemingly heartless couturier who
has his whole world turned inside out when he falls under the spell of
Micheline Presle at her most radiant. There are some fine
supporting contributions, from a talented ensemble that includes Jean
Chevrier, Gabrielle Dorziat and Jeanne Fusier-Gir, but it is the
sublime pairing of Rouleau and Presle that gives the film its enduring
lustre and makes it so utterly enthralling. With its brooding,
doom-laden photography, intense performances and razor-sharp editing,
Falbalas feels more like a film
noir thriller than a conventional melodrama, and this is particularly
evident in the darkly lyrical final sequences which provide the most
authentic depiction of a man's descent into madness.
Filming on
Falbalas began
almost immediately after the Liberation of France by the Allies in
1944. However, endless problems with power cuts and scarcity of
resources delayed the production and it was not until July 1945 that it
was finally released. It is reported that Becker was not entirely
pleased with the film, as it was set in a world that was too far
removed from his own experience. It is interesting that Becker's
next film, another romantic drama titled
Antoine et Antoinette (1947),
is anchored solidly in the world of the proletariat, a precursor of the
social realist (kitchen sink) drama that would come to the fore in the
1950s.
Falbalas, by
contrast, is a far more stylised film that feels like a kind of twisted
fairytale, in which neither of the two main characters, Philippe and
Micheline, appears to have a firm grip on reality, as both are in
search of an unattainable ideal. A haunting and evocative work,
Falbalas reveals a more humane and
poetic side to Jacques Becker than is evident in his subsequent work,
and it is not hard to see why it is considered one of his best films.
© James Travers 2001
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Next Jacques Becker film:
Antoine et Antoinette (1947)
Film Synopsis
Philippe Clarence is the genius couturier who runs one of the most successful
fashion houses in Paris. His unsurpassed talent for design is matched
only by the ease with which he draws women towards him, women he toys with
whilst they amuse him, and then casually discards at his leisure. So
desperately infatuated with him is his former mistress Anne-Marie that she
cannot bear to be far from him, so she lives in his shadow, content merely
to be his head of sales. Whilst he delights in the extraordinary power
he has over the fair sex, Philippe has never known true love - until the
day Micheline walks into his life.
When they meet for the first time Micheline is engaged to another man, Philippe's
fabric supplier Daniel Rousseau. Like countless women before her, Micheline
is immediately bowled over by the couturier's marvellous creations and his
smooth, seductive charm. By the time Philippe realises he is in love
with Micheline she has already seen through him and, put off by his cynicism,
she tries to distance herself from him. With his latest collection
due to be exhibited in a few days' time, Philippe's state of mind is greatly
perturbed by this unexpected rejection, and Annie-Marie's sudden suicide
doesn't help matters.
Once it is apparent to him that Micheline has no intention of returning to
him, Philippe become increasingly prone to acts of folly. After putting
the finishing touches to his last masterpiece - a magnificent wedding dress
for the woman he has lost his heart and soul to - he goes missing for a while,
returning only on the day when his new collection is to be shown to an admiring
public. By now, he is reduced to a vague ghost of a man, totally consumed
by the delusion of love and living a fantasy that is about to take him right
over the edge of a precipice...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.