Film Review
The limits of romantic love are explored with delicacy and tenderness
in this sombre reconstruction of a real-life event, the brief meeting
of the French writer René de Chateaubriand with an ardent young
admirer. It is a beautifully ironic story, for although
Chateaubriand is able to arouse a burning passion in others through his
literary achievements, he himself has lost the physical and spiritual
yearning for love. The revelatory rencontre of an old man and his
muse in an appropriately dark, stormy mountain hotel evokes with a
searing poignancy the transience and boundaries of human experience.
L'Occitanienne is the first
cinematic feature to be directed by Jean Périssé, who had
previously made several documentaries for television and who is very
much devoted to the Pyrenees, the region where he lives. Through
his subtle and elegant mise-en-scène, Périssé
shows great promise as a filmmaker, although his efforts are
compromised a little in this film by some unnecessary clichés
and the distracting inclusion of many cutaway shots of the Pyrenean
setting, both of which diminish the intensity of the central
drama.
The quality of Périssé's suitably restrained direction is enhanced by
the striking chiaroscuro cinematography (which was presumably inspired by
French paintings of the period)
and sublime performances from
the three principals, with a particularly arresting contribution from
Valentine Teisseire in her auspicious film debut.
Despite its modest scope and limited budget,
L'Occitanienne manages to be
captivating work, a compelling chamber piece that feels like an Ingmar
Bergman film seen through the distinctive prism of French romanticism.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
Who was L'Occitanienne, the mysterious woman that preoccupied the celebrated
French writer René de Chateaubriand in his later years? One
man knows the identity of this unknown lover - the maître d'hôtel
at a remote mountain retreat in Cauterets, set high up in the Pyrenees.
It was during one stormy evening in 1829 that he witnessed the ageing writer
arrive at the hotel in search of nothing more than a bed for the night.
By chance there happened to be an attractive aristocratic woman staying at
the hotel at the time. The meeting seemed almost providential.
Even though he was forty years her senior, Chateaubriand could not resist
being drawn to this fascinating woman, and she appeared to be just as taken
with him. Within moments of their first meeting, these two fugitives
from the storm were bound to one another by an intense mutual longing.
Unaware that they were being spied on by the maître d'hôtel,
a soppy romantic at heart, the writer and his young admirer are soon caught
up in the most passionate of liaisons. No wonder L'Occitanienne
became an obsession of Chateaubriand...
© James Travers
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