Film Review
Jacques Demy followed his first full length-film,
Lola
(1961) with this comparatively anodyne tale of love and obsession in the gambling
halls of Nice, a far more conventional kind of film for the time, but still unmistakably
New Wave in its look and feel.
La Baie des
anges is a noticeably darker, more ironic, film than
Lola,
showing us a bleaker side of human experience, a relentless portrayal of compulsive
behaviour. It is also a film about corruption - how a decent young man is seduced
first by gambling and then by a self-centred older woman - and ultimately redemption,
so there is a surprising resonance with the films of Robert Bresson.
Jeanne Moreau is perfect casting for the role of the perverse femme fatale and turns in a
portrayal of caprice and obsession that echoes the one seen in Truffaut's
Jules et Jim (1962) - there is the same intensity,
dangerous spontaneity, predatory sexuality and lingering sense of mystery. Next
to her, Claude Mann is the ideal complement - an ordinary, down-to-earth young man who
makes an easy prey but who looks as though he has what it takes to save the seemingly
doomed Jackie. Both actors bring an emotional depth and poetry which is perhaps lacking
in the script - poetry which Michel Legrand's aching music and Jean Rabier's beautiful
black and white photography can only emphasise. All these ingredients work together
perfectly, vividly conveying the alternating moods of elation and despondency that follow
the outcome of a game of roulette. The film's ending is cruelly abrupt but it is
also a masterstroke: it portrays the triumph of human will over chance, with the suddenness
that mirrors Jackie's insanely spontaneous character.
As Jean Vigo shows in his
film,
A
propos de Nice (1930), the town in which the film is set is one of extreme contrasts,
poverty and wealth living side-by-side. The main location is just one device that
Demy uses well to convey the extreme mood swings that punctuate the life of a compulsive
gambler. This can be seen most starkly in his use of tonal variation in the crisp
black and white photography. Jeanne Moreau is a platinum blonde here (with hair
so white that it
fluoresces); like her co-star,
she appears in clothes that are either very light or very dark - there are few in-between
tones. The sets likewise alternate between the drab (dinghy hotel rooms, dark back
streets) and the glamorous (a glitzy hotel suite, wide boulevards, sunny beaches),
again creating a sense of interminable seesaw mood changes. As a result,
the film has a grittiness, a tough love realism which is far less apparent in Demy's
subsequent, better known films.
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Demy film:
Les Parapluies de Cherbourg (1964)
Film Synopsis
Jean Fournier is a modest young bank clerk living in Paris. He is sensible, respectable,
and so it is with reluctance that he agrees to accompany his friend Caron to a casino.
When he wins a small fortune at roulette, Jean immediately becomes hooked on gambling
and makes a snap decision to spend his holiday in Nice - much to the disgust of his father
who believes that he will ruin himself. Arriving in Nice, Jean wastes no time and
heads for the gambling tables, where he meets an alluring blonde named Jackie. She
is a compulsive gambler who has abandoned her comfortable bourgeois milieu, her
husband and her children, and lives a life that is dictated by the whims of the roulette
wheel. With virtually no money left, she places one final bet - with Jean's advice.
When she wins, Jackie is convinced that Jean will bring her good luck and clings to him.
For his part, Jean is intoxicated by love for this strange woman, and gambles away his
own money to be with her. One minute they are as rich as kings; the next they are
down to their last few hundred francs. Will their fate together be determined by
the spin of the roulette wheel…?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.