Film Review
It's quite a leap from the perfumed salons of Colette's Belle
Époque Paris to the bleak allegorical fantasy world of Jean-Paul
Sartre but director Jacqueline Audry somehow manages to make this
unlikely transition via this quirky adaptation of Sartre's famous one
act play,
Huis clos.
Better known to the English speaking world as
No Exit, the play was first
performed at the Théâtre du Vieux-Colombier in Paris in
1944 and is an essential existential work, the one that gave us the
Sartrean phrase "L'enfer, c'est les autres", which is commonly
translated as "Hell is other people". Sartre's meaning is not
that people are inherently vile, but that it is through the judgement
of others that our lives are shaped and given meaning.
The 'hell' experienced by the three protagonists in Sartre's play is as
much a psychological one as a physical one. It arises from the
discrepancy between the blameless lives they thought they had led and
the impression of their lives as perceived by those nearest to
them. It is the complete reverse of Frank Capra's
It's a Wonderful Life (1946),
in which a suicide is persuaded of the worth of his life by the
intervention of a benevolent angel. In
Huis clos, the main characters have
to accept that their lives were entirely worthless, that they have had
no positive impact on the world and are quick to be forgotten by their
living associates. A more terrible vision of Hell it is hard to
conceive.
The main fault of Audry's film is that it dispenses with the rigid
unity of Sartre's play by including filmed inserts (some needlessly
lengthy) showing the events before and after the deaths of the
protagonists. The screenwriters obviously thought this was a
necessary expediency to prevent the film from appearing too theatrical,
but it weakens the dramatic intensity of the piece and makes it a
somewhat less coherent and satisfying work. Sartre's subtle black
humour is overemphasised in a few scenes, again presumably to make the
film more palatable for a cinema audience, but this only has the effect
of diluting the bleakness of the original play. After watching a
performance of
Huis clos as
its author intended, Audry's film can only appear slight and whimsical.
Which is not to say the film is not entertaining. The sparky
interaction of the three principals makes
Huis clos one of Audry's most
enjoyable and unpredictable films, and who could resist the prospect of
watching Arletty in one of her feistiest performances as a pugnacious,
acid spitting lesbian? The casting of Arletty in this film is
bitterly ironic as the actress had herself been the victim of public
censure for several years after the end of WWII. Not long after
the Liberation, Arletty was arrested and incarcerated for having
pursued an amorous liaison with a German officer during the
Occupation. The actress was banned for working for three years
and it would take a while before she was able to win back the national
esteem in which she was once held.
Arletty is so well-suited to the role she plays in
Huis clos that you can almost
convince yourself Sartre had created it especially for her (in the
first production of the play her character was played by the formidable
Russian 'method' actress Tania Balachova). Most memorable is the
scene in which she attempts to seduce Gaby Sylvia, another highly
respected actress, better known for her stage work, under the
disapproving gaze of Franck Villard, who also impresses in a part that
is far more ambiguous and unsympathetic than he is known for. The
stellar supporting cast includes Nicole Courcel, Danielle Delorme and
Jean Debucourt, with Yves Deniaud almost stealing the film as the
creepiest bellboy you dare imagine, more Pinter than Sartre.
Huis clos hardly does justice to
Sartre's great play, and it is far from being Jacqueline Audry's best
film, but it has considerable appeal and is as fun an introduction to Sartre's
idea of existentialism as you're ever likely to come across.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
On leaving an elevator, a diverse group of people find themselves in
the lobby of what looks like a plush hotel. The receptionist
deals with the new arrivals with a cold professionalism and, one by
one, they are directed to their rooms. South American
reporter Garcin finds himself sharing a spacious, ornately decorated
appartment with two women, Inès and Estelle. It soon dawns
on each of them that this is Hell and they are intended to spend the
rest of eternity in each other's company. On a screen, they see
how their deaths have affected those they have left behind.
Believing he has betrayed them, Garcin's former political conspirators
are quick to forget their association with him. Inès's
lesbian lover has recovered from a suicide attempt and is seen
returning to her husband. The man whom Estelle believed to be
devoted to her begins an affair with another woman within minutes of
her being buried! Each of the three is adamant of having done
nothing to justify going to Hell, but as they become better acquainted
with each other the truth emerges...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.