Film Review
It is somewhat indicative of the uneven quality of his output
that immediately before he released his most daring
film,
L'Amant de lady Chatterley
(1955), director Marc Allégret delivered one of his most
anaemic, a completely passionless adaptation of a novel by the Austrian
writer Vicki Baum. What makes this all the more surprising is
that Allégret had already adapted one of Baum's novels very
successfully as
Lac aux dames (1934), one of
his most inspired and engaging films.
Futures vedettes exemplifies the
sorry stultification and complacency that beset French cinema in the
mid-1950s. Indeed, it rather supports François Truffaut's thesis
that old-time directors like Marc Allégret had had their day - their
predictable and polished style of filmmaking was soon to be washed away
in the tsunami that was the French New Wave, and not before time if
this film is anything to go by.
Given the pedigree of its cast (not to mention its director) it is
remarkable that
Futures vedettes
manages to be such a plodding, lacklustre affair. How could a
film which throws a young and seriously adorable Brigitte Bardot at the
lethally charismatic Jean Marais possibly fail to sparkle? The
dull, plotting-by-numbers script may have had something to do with it,
but the main culprit is Allégret himself - he seems to be
directing the film in his sleep and his inspiration has clearly
deserted him in all but a handful of scenes. Compare this with
the thematically similar
Entrée des artistes
(1938) and you would hardly think it was the work of the same
director. Allégret at least partly redeems himself by
casting Yves Robert and Isabelle Pia in the main supporting roles -
their heart-warming scenes inject a little humanity and substance into
the proceedings, but alas not enough to prevent this still-born film
from being a life-sapping soporific.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2013
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Next Marc Allégret film:
L'Amant de lady Chatterley (1955)
Film Synopsis
A gifted tenor, Eric Walter finds he has no shortage of female admirers at
the music academy in Vienna where he teaches. His most ardent fans
are Sophie Dimater and Elisa Petersen, two girls barely out of their teens
who are both equally smitten by their handsome teacher. Eric appears
to be immune to the bevy of young females who are swooning at his feet. He
is too devoted to his beautiful wife Marie to want to start an affair with
another woman, but, being a world famous opera singer, she is often away
from home and he copes badly with her absence.
It is Sophie, a promising young dancer, who finally wins Eric's favours and
becomes his mistress. This is something that the more fragile Elisa
is ill-equipped to deal with. Now that Eric has made his choice, she
has nothing to live for, so she decides to kill herself. Of course,
Eric's affair with Sophie is destined to be a brief liaison, soon forgotten.
When Marie returns to Eric, Sophie resumes her education with a renewed determination
to make a success of her career and become a future star...
© James Travers
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