Film Review
Five years before Penguin Books published the full unexpurgated version
of D.H. Lawrence's
Lady Chatterley's
Lover, resulting in a high profile obscenity trial (thirty years
after the author's death), French cinema audiences were treated to this
surprisingly risqué film adaptation by French film director Marc
Allégret.
The first adaptation of Lawrence's most famous
novel,
L'Amant de lady Chatterley
may appear tame by today's standards, but for the mid-1950s it was
pretty steamy stuff and the film was banned outright in the United
States. Based on a stage play by Gaston Bonheur and
Philippe de Rothschild, the film is a characteristically Gallic
reinterpretation of Lawrence's novel, far more concerned with the class
implications of an illicit relationship than with the lurid details of
a torrid love affair. Whilst the film's love scenes are
discreetly handled, they are highly suggestive and represent something
of a milestone in the portrayal of sex in the cinema.
Danielle Darrieux, arguably the most glamorous French actress of her
generation, was the obvious choice for the part of Lady Chatterley, and
whilst the film is not one of her best remembered, the performance she
gives in it is assuredly one of her finest.
The agonising trauma of a woman having to choose between the man she loves out of duty and
the man she loves by instinct and necessity is powerfully conveyed by
Darrieux in the film's most compelling scenes. At first, it is
tempting to regard Allégret's casting of British and Italian
actors for the roles of Sir Clifford Chatterley and the gamekeeper Mellors as
an egregious example of national stereotyping. Is it necessary to
stress the Arctic frigidity of the one and the hot-blooded temperament
of the other in such a crude way? In fact, the casting turns out
to be inspired. Leo Genn, a well-regarded English actor who had
previously been nominated for an Oscar for his work in
Quo Vadis (1951), perfectly
embodies Lawrence's most tragically drawn character, a man hopelessly
dependent on his wife's misguided view of love, whilst Erno Crisa, a
charismatic star of Italian cinema, conveys not only the passionate
nature of Mellors but also his psychological complexity. The
film's power lies not in its direction and writing, admirable as these
are, but in the blistering authenticity that the three principals bring
to their performances.
Marc Allégret directed
L'Amant
de lady Chatterley towards the end of his career, when he was
mainly preoccupied with lightweight popular comedies such as
En effeuillant la marguerite
(1956) and
Un drôle de dimanche (1958).
Previously, Allégret had distinguished himself with such films
as
Fanny
(1932) and
Entrée des artistes
(1938), although he was never considered to be a great filmmaker of the
standing of Carné, Duvivier or Renoir. His D.H. Lawrence
adaptation represents one of the artistic highpoints of his career, not
just an inspired rendering of a daring and very problematic novel, but
also a wry commentary on contemporary attitudes towards marital
infidelity, class and the portrayal of sex in cinema. There have
been several film adaptations of
Lady
Chatterley's Lover since this one, including Pascale Ferran's
sizzlingly sensual
Lady Chatterley (2006), but
Allégret's film has its own unique charm. The severe
censorship limitations of the 1950s may have prevented Allégret
from showing us the more lurid aspects of Lawrence's novel, but his
film captures its essence and perhaps manages to express Lawrence's
ideas about the inseparability of love and desire, the union of the
mind and the body, more succinctly than the author himself.
This film, like the novel on which it is based, is surely ripe for a
fresh reappraisal.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marc Allégret film:
En effeuillant la marguerite (1956)
Film Synopsis
Lady Constance Chatterley is under pressure from both her sister Hilda and
her husband, Sir Clifford, to find herself a lover so that she can get herself
pregnant and provide an heir to the Chatterley estate. Sir Clifford
is the wealthy owner of a colliery, but through injuries he sustained in
the war he is now impotent and confined to a wheelchair. Although Constance
sympathises with her husband, she cannot bring herself to be unfaithful to
him. The idea of taking a lover appals her. And then she meets
Mellors, Sir Clifford's burly gamekeeper.
It would seem that Mellors is just what the Chatterleys need to obtain an
heir. Strongly attracted to the crude, muscular man, Constance does
not resist as he draws her into an intensely physical relationship.
Lady Chatterley has never known a passion so brutal and life-affirming as
this. The affair isn't purely physical. She soon realises that she
is deeply in love with Mellors and could not end the relationship now even
if she wanted to. No one could understand, not even her devoted husband,
what Constance feels for her lover. She and Mellors belong to completely
different worlds, but she has never known a man who has made her feel so
complete and alive.
For all the happiness it brings her, Lady Chatterley knows full well the
scandal that will flare up if ever her infidelity were to be discovered.
Her reputation, and that of her husband, would be ruined forever. Whilst
the torrid affair remains a secret the lovers are safe - but for how much
longer? Then comes the day that Constance has been dreading.
The gamekeeper's estranged wife shows up unexpectedly and, out of sheer spite,
she confronts Sir Clifford with the news of his wife's illicit love affair.
Constance's woes are compounded by the discovery that she is pregnant with
Mellors' child...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.