Film Review
After the two year hiatus that followed his Oscar winning
La Nuit américaine
(1973), director François Truffaut was keen to make another
period drama - on a grander scale than his earlier
L'Enfant
sauvage (1969) and
Les Deux Anglaises et le continent
(1971). When his faithful screenwriter Jean Gruault
suggested adapting
The Diary of
Adèle Hugo, a recently published book edited by the
American academic Frances Vernor Guille, he could not have been more
enthusiastic. Unfortunately, Truffaut's film production company
was facing financial difficulties and the director had difficulty
finding a backer to bankroll what would have been his most lavish
production. What was conceived as a blockbuster on the scale of
Gone With the Wind, a
three-hour epic studded with grand historical set-pieces, ended up as a
far more modest work which focused exclusively on its central
character. The other obstacle that Truffaut had to overcome was
obtaining the rights to Guille's book. At first, Guille agreed to sell
the rights on condition that she was hired as co-screenwriter, at a fee
that would have made the production unviable. By appealing
directly to Jean Hugo, Adèle Hugo's grand-nephew, Truffaut
finally mananged to persuade Guille to take a more reasonable line.
L'Histoire d'Adèle H.
is arguably Truffaut's purest, and perhaps cruellest, exploration of
the
amour fou, that
obsessive, destructive love that is central to the director's oeuvre
and which manifests itself, in subtly differing ways, in all of his
films. Truffaut's most famous treatment of the
amour fou is his New Wave
masterpiece
Jules et Jim (1962), although
this film is somewhat atypical, lacking the abject bleakness, bordering
on despair, that predominates in his later films. The sunniness
and apparent frivolity of
Jules et
Jim make a stark contrast with the solemnity and darkness of
L'Histoire d'Adèle H.
The latter is the most extreme portrayal of romantic obsession, one
that is totally devoid of hope, an impression that is underscored by
its cold wintry setting and sombre near-documentary cinematographic
style. The notion that our emotional needs can never be satisfied
lies at the heart of both Truffaut's cinema and his own personal life,
and it is this fundamental tragedy of human experience that the
director was able to evoke so powerfully in his films.
Initially, Truffaut considered Catherine Deneuve for the part of
Adèle Hugo, but later, once the scripts had been completed and
he had raised the necessary finance, he become seized by the idea of
giving the role to the 19-year-old Isabelle Adjani, a rising star of
the Comédie-Française. Adjani had already appeared
in a few films, most notably Claude Pinoteau's
La
Gifle (1974), but she had set her sights on pursuing a
theatrical career and so instantly rejected Truffaut's offer to star in
his next film. It took a certain amount of arm-twisting and
crawling before Truffaut was finally able to coerce Adjani into accepting
the part, although she was insistent that she was too young for the
role. As happened in virtually every one of his films, Truffaut
fell madly in love with his leading actress and saw no distinction
between muse and lover, although Adjani did nothing to encourage him
and even less to reciprocate his feelings. It is not much of an
exaggeration to say that Truffaut's relationship with Adjani during the
making of this film was the exact inverse of that between Adèle
Hugo and her uninterested beau idéal, Pinson. The brief
sequence in which Adèle mistakes another officer (significantly
played by Truffaut) for her lover hints as much.
Truffaut's preoccupation with Adjani was just one of the challenges
that the film presented. Most of it was shot on location on the
island of Guernsey, where Victor Hugo lived in exile for 15 years
during the reign of Napoléon III. Although the
island proved to be a reasonably convincing substitute for Nova Scotia,
with its rugged scenery and depressing lack of sunlight, its remoteness
caused some difficulties for the cast and crew, and the requirement to
shoot scenes in two languages (French and English) did not help
matters. Having barely survived this ordeal, the production
team then had to decamp to Dakar, Senegal, to shoot the concluding
scenes set in Barbados. It was not the happiest of productions,
although Truffaut was confident that his film would be well worth the
effort.
Despite some initially encouraging reviews, the film met with only a
lukewarm response at the French box office, where it barely sold 700
thousand tickets. Fortunately, it performed far better on its
international release, particularly in the United States, where some
very positive reviews ensured its success. Today,
L'Histoire d'Adèle H. is
generally less well regarded than most of Truffaut's other romantic
dramas, perhaps because it offers so little hope and fails to make its
heroine much more than an object of ridicule. The central
difficulty with the film is that the spectator is uncertain how to
regard the main character, sympathetically or with derision. (It
is easier to sympathise with the harangued Pinson, for all his obvious
failings.) We feel we should pity Adèle, since the
pain of unrequited love is something we have all experienced, and yet
the extent of her delusion, the insistency with which she pursues her
former lover (stalking him across much of the New World like a
Brontë-esque zombie), her lack of feeling for her father's
concern, make it hard for us to identify with her and see her for more than
what she is - a sad, emotionally twisted wretch who badly needs to get
a life.
This is not to downplay the film's technical and artistic achievements
- the exquisite beauty of Nestor Almendros's cinematography, which
eloquently expresses the hopelessness of Adèle's plight with its
muted palette and stifling lack of natural light; the sad sense of longing
that resonates from Maurice Jaubert's score (written before the
composer's tragic death in 1940); and Adjani's compelling portrayal of
a girl being slowly eaten away by forces she cannot control, a
performance which still ranks as one of her best. Truffaut's
direction is as inspired and meticulous as ever, evidenced by the
subtle way he distances the spectator from the heroine (for example, by
framing her in the background, in doorways or windows), thereby
emphasising her isolation and her inability to see beyond her
delusional fantasy to the world around her, a world that offers her
genuine compassion and interest.
L'Histoire d'Adèle H. is
perhaps not the most engaging of Truffaut's films, but it is one of his
most haunting and disturbing, the one in which the director comes
closest to exposing his troubled soul and his own incurable addiction
to love.
© James Travers 2012
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Next François Truffaut film:
L'Argent de poche (1976)
Film Synopsis
A young woman arrives in Halifax, the capital city of Nova Scotia, in 1863,
and immediately sets about looking for the man she has lost her heart to.
Although she goes by an assumed name, she is in fact Adèle Hugo, the
second daughter of the famous French author Victor Hugo. The object
of her mad desire is Lieutenant Albert Pinson, a young army officer whom
she regards as her fiancé, although no such commitment has been made.
Assisted by her landlady's husband, Adèle manages to meet up with
her beloved Albert, but he is far from pleased to see her. Indeed,
her presence in Halifax deeply troubles him.
Ignoring the lieutenant's aggressive insistence that their love affair is
over, Adèle continues to force herself on him, convinced that one
day he will reciprocate her feelings and marry her. But the young woman
is completely deluded, blinded by the infatuation of love. Even when
her father has given his consent to the marriage, Pinson categorically refuses
to wed Adèle. In desperation, she offers to pay off his debts,
but whilst he may take her money he shows her no gratitude. She is
an unwelcome encumbrance and he wishes she would return home.
Even the news that the lieutenant has affianced himself to another woman
does not deter the now hopelessly fixated Adèle. Her financial
resources now exhausted, the young woman is forced to give up her comfortable
lodgings and move into a shelter for the homeless, her only comfort now being
her diary in which she records every detail of her strange obsession.
As her health and personal circumstances deteriorate even further, Adèle
becomes a pauper, consumed and destroyed by her romantic fantasies.
In the end, she loses all contact with the world around her, to the extent
that she fails to recognise Pinson when she comes across him by chance one
day. This poor sad creature will end her days in an asylum, lost in
her dreams...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.