Film Review
With
L'Ours et
la Poupée, director Michel Deville (aided by
his faithful co-screenwriter Nina Companeez) brought to a decisive end
a series of light romantic comedies that began with
Ce soir ou jamais (1961) and
established him as one of France's most popular auteur filmmakers
in the 1960s.
After this final (and
ditsiest) round of Marivaudage tomfoolery, Deville made a swift
transition to a darker, more introspective and sometimes disturbing style of cinema
that examined human nature from a far less rosier and flippant
perspective. Like a pancake binge before the long weeks of Lenten
fasting, here is Deville greedily indulging in his own peculiar brand
of lunacy.
Looking like a screwball comedy send-up of a classic fairytale (or vice versa),
L'Ours et la
Poupée is an engaging romp but it feels slight
compared with Deville's previous films and hardly any effort appears to
have been spent on the writing front.
It was
however a commercial success, owing no doubt to the casting of Brigitte
Bardot in the lead role (one of her last), a doll-like heiress with dominatrix
tendencies who is obviously a near relation of the character the actress would
later play in
Les Pétroleuses (1971)
and
Si Don Juan était une
femme (1973).
By this time, Bardot
was disillusioned with the film industry and Deville's film was timely, a long overdue chance
for the actress to forge a new identity for herself.
Alas, this new, more assertive Bardot was to be just another
object for seedy male fantasies, as readily exploited as her earlier
sex kitten persona, and it would not be long before the actress turned her back on acting for
good.
Originally, the role that ultimately went to Bardot was
conceived for Catherine Deneuve, but the latter declined the part on
learning
that both Jean-Paul Belmondo and Alain Delon had refused the lead male
role when it was offered to them simultaneously.
An actor who was never ashamed to be in touch with his feminine
side, Jean-Pierre Cassel was perfectly suited to play opposite a butched-up Bardot in a classic
rom-com set up where the usual male-female roles are reversed.
The scene where Bardot casually pushes a jam sandwich into Cassel's
face wasn't just a blow for late 60s feminism (such a shame that Bardot
spends most of the film running about in six inch miniskirts and knee-length
boots), it was also a homage to the famous scene in
The
Public Enemy (1931), where James Cagney finds a novel use for a grapefruit half.
The side-splitting jam butty incident is, sad to say, the most memorable moment in
an otherwise almost completely forgettable film.
With
a virtually content-free plot that is barely sustained by a
handful of silly comedy situations (how many times can a 2CV crash into
a Rolls-Royce?), the film ends up with Bardot and Cassel spending what
feels like an eternity frolicking about,
dancing,
singing and making love to the music of Gioachino Rossini.
Nice work if you can get it but not much fun for someone
expecting more than a homeopathic dose of entertainment.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2015
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Next Michel Deville film:
Raphaël ou le débauché (1971)