Film Review
Two ill-matched lonely people who meet, fall in love and are driven
apart by circumstances beyond their control... It is a theme that
director André Téchiné visits many times in his
distinctive oeuvre and in
Hôtel
des Amériques he delivers one of his bleakest forays into
the complexities and traumas of romantic love.
Téchiné made the film because he had a burning desire to
work with Catherine Deneuve and Patrick Dewaere, two of the most
prominent names in French cinema in the early 1980s. This was the
only occasion on which Deneuve and Dewaere appeared on screen together,
and this fact alone confers on the film the status of a classic.
Although Deneuve would work with Téchiné on many future
occasions, this is arguably their most successful collaboration - a
brooding romantic drama that plays to both their strengths and leaves a
lasting impression.
Given that the film is set in the sunny town of Biarritz, one of
France's top tourist destinations, it is surprising how dark and
gloomily introspective it is. With its restricted palette and
parsimonious use of lighting the film almost has the character of a
film noir, which is perhaps appropriate given that both of the main
characters are withdrawn wraith-like individuals reluctant to emerge
from the shadows of their past experiences. Bruno Nuytten's
oppressive noir-like photography brings a note of fatalism (one of the
key motifs of Téchiné's cinema), an impression that
neither of the protagonists can escape from the life in which they have
become trapped - not even love (or is it merely raw animal lust?) has
the power to set them free.
Patrick Dewaere began his career in Café-théâtre
(working alongside the great Coluche) and Téchiné
acknowledges this by casting two other Café-théâtre
stars, Josiane Balasko and Dominique Lavanant, in supporting
roles. The distinguished cast also includes Sabine Haudepin, who
famously debuted as Jeanne Moreau's daughter in François
Truffaut's
Jule et Jim (1962), and Etienne
Chicot, an actor renowned for playing ambiguous, dangerously volatile
characters, here perfectly suited for the role of Bernard, a far less
sympathetic version of Dewaere's character.
In both its tone and its subject,
Hôtel
des Amériques bears some similarity with André
Téchiné's subsequent romantic dramas,
Rendez-vous
(1985),
J'embrasse pas (1991) and
Alice
et Martin (1998), although it sets itself apart with its
unremitting aura of pessimism. Right from the start, we sense we
know how the drama will pan out, and whilst it may follow an erratic
and unpredictable course (another feature of Téchiné's
cinema) the outcome is certain. Dewaere has never appeared more
hopelessly fragile, nor Deneuve more distant and emotionally confused, than in
this sombre tale of two lost souls trying and failing to fall in
love. Coming right at the start of Téchiné's most
inspired period,
Hôtel des
Amériques is one of the director's most lyrical and
haunting films.
© James Travers 2012
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Next André Téchiné film:
Rendez-vous (1985)
Film Synopsis
Hélène is a 30-something anaesthetist at a hospital in
the French seaside town of Biarritz. One evening, whilst driving
home in a distracted state, she almost runs over a pedestrian,
Gilles. Hélène agrees to accompany the good-looking
stranger to a late-night diner to share a drink and allow her to give
him her insurance details. Although Hélène admits
that Gilles is not her type, she is strangely drawn to him. He is
about her age but he appears unsettled and vulnerable. He lives
at a hotel run by his mother and barely scrapes a living as a tourist
guide. After spending a night together, Hélène
takes Gilles to a rundown house that she has inherited from a former
lover. She is unable to renovate the house, but neither can she
bring herself to sell it. Hélène's reluctance to
part with the house convinces Gilles that she cannot put her last love
affair behind her and this imposes a strain on their
relationship. In the end, Hélène has only one
option open to her - to leave Gilles for good...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.