Film Review
One of the great social conundrums of the 20th century is how easy it
was for Fascism to assert itself in the 1930s through the mature
democracies of countries such as Germany and Italy. Alberto
Moravia's 1951 novel
Il Conformista
(a.k.a.
The Conformist)
provided a possible explanation, in the innate tendency that human
beings have to mimic the behaviour of others (i.e. conform) in order to
feel part of the group. In his inspired adaptation of
Moravia's novel, director Bernardo Bertolucci conjures up a striking
visual metaphor for this phenomenon. As he attempts to cross an
empty dance hall, the main protagonist, Marcello Clerici, is suddenly
surrounded by happily dancing men and women who impede his
progress. Within just a few minutes, Clerici is completely
absorbed into a mass of human flesh and has no choice but to surrender
his autonomy to the group, much as he does (in a more literal sense)
when he dedicates himself to the Fascist cause.
Il Conformista was not
Bertolucci's first great film but it was his first major international
success and the one that established him as Italy's most prominent film
director in the 1970s. The flamboyant visuals and bold surreal
flourishes, more redolent of Fellini than Bertolucci, provide a
suitably Wagnerian tone to the film, one that mockingly evokes the
delusion and ambition of the Fascist leaders who were so confident they
could bring about an empire to rival that of the Ancient Greeks and the
Romans. From his highly stylised depiction of 1930s Germany, it
is evident that Bertolucci is far less preoccupied with historical
accuracy than in presenting the subjective experience of someone caught
up in the events of that period, an ordinary man who yields to the lure
of Fascism as easily as he does to the embrace of an attractive
woman.
Clerici becomes a Fascist not through any ideological conviction, but
simply because of his compulsive need to belong to the main throng of
humanity. Haunted by a past that is disfigured by social
isolation, perversion and guilt, he feels impelled to live a normal
life, but he mistakes normality for conformity. Weak-willed and
morally deficient, he is more than willing to give up his own identity
if he can become part of the ensemble. Clerici is far from being
a sympathetic character, and yet we find it disturbingly easy to
identify with him - partly because he is played so convincingly and so
humanely by Jean-Louis Trintignant (one of his best screen
performances), but also because we recognise something of ourselves in
his primeval desire to belong to the group.
Clerici's moral conflict, or more accurately his moral subsidence,
becomes evident to us through the ingeniously assembled sequence of
flashbacks which show how the character's past experiences (which range
from the sordid to the traumatic) have conspired to make him such a
willing servant of Fascism. So mesmerising is Vittorio Storaro's
cinematography that it takes a while for the spectator to realise just
how complex the narrative structure is, that it is in fact an elaborate
montage spanning several different time frames. Despite this, the
film has a remarkable coherence and makes Moravia's thesis
frighteningly plausible. Not only do we gain some appreciation of
how an individual might succumb to Fascism, we are also left wondering
whether we might not go the same way if placed in the same
predicament. The need to conform, to affirm that we are part of a
group, is perhaps the most powerful human impulse there is, and
Bertolucci's film leaves us in little doubt that this may well be what
allowed some of the most vile regimes of the 20th century to
flourish. The wisdom of crowds is vastly overrated.
© James Travers 2012
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Film Synopsis
In 1930s Italy, Marcello Clerici makes the decision to join the Fascist
secret police. Eager to prove himself, Clerici agrees to
assassinate his former teacher Professor Quadri, an anti-Fascist
intellectual who is now living in exile in Paris. Having recently
married, Clerici combines the assignment with his honeymoon, but in the
process he succumbs to the irresistible charms of his victim's young
wife Anna. Suspecting that his former student may be in the
employ of the Fascists, Quadri lays a trap, but Clerici manages to
convince the professor of his good faith. It seems that Clerici's
mission will pass off without a hitch...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.