Film Review
The last film that Georges Franju made solely for the cinema (all his
subsequent work was commissioned for French television) is this
haunting adaptation of Émile Zola's 1875 novel
La Faute de l'abbé Mouret,
the fifth installment in the author's famous
Rougon-Macquart series. It is
an atypical work for Franju in many respects, not least because it is
his first colour feature and is hence strikingly different from all of
his previous films. Unjustly overlooked, this is one of the more
successful attempts at transposing Zola's unique literary style to the
big screen, and in common with much of Franju's work offers a bleak yet
incisive examination of the human psyche.
One of the most notable characteristics of Zola's novel is the abrupt
change in style which comes when the central protagonist, the young
country priest of the book's title, loses his memory and acquires a
sudden change of identity. Franju matches this by a similarly
dramatic transition in cinematic style. The austere country
landscape, photographed in a palette of dull browns and greens, is
suddenly transformed into a lush Garden of Eden, with stronger lighting
and much more vibrant use of colour. Many shots are passable
imitations of paintings by impressionists, Renoir, Monet and
Manet. Franju is known for being a filmmaker with a keen visual
sense, often using potent images to convey an idea or sentiment.
This is more than evident in
La
Faute de l'abbé Mouret, a film which contains some of the
director's starkest visual compositions, some viscerally horrific.
Making a remarkable film debut in the lead role is Francis Huster, a
talented young actor who would enjoy a distinguished career on stage
and screen. Only an actor of exceptional talent could play the
two different sides to Mouret's persona as convincingly and with such a
profound sense of tragedy. We scarcely recognise the insouciant
lover that Mouret becomes when he loses his memory and identity.
Huster creates two very different personas and yet convinces us that,
underneath, they are the same individual. The contributions from
the supporting cast are just as authentic and every character is as
well-drawn and believable as that in Zola's novel.
La Faute de l'abbé Mouret
may not have quite the arresting visual impact of Franju's earlier
work, but it is nonetheless a captivating piece of cinema, possibly the
most humane film he ever made.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Georges Franju film:
Nuits rouges (1974)
Film Synopsis
Serge Mouret has recently taken up his first position as parish priest
in the Provençal village of Artauds. The locals have
little interest in religion and for most of the time Mouret is giving
sermons to an empty church. Far from weakening his faith, the
experience of living in a heathen community merely intensifies it and
the young priest suffers a nervous breakdown. Having completely
lost his memory, he is cared for by the owners of a nearby rundown
mansion, Le Paradou. Here, not knowing who he is, Mouret falls in
love with Albine, an uneducated young woman who nurses him back to
health. Once recovered, Mouret pursues an idyllic love affair
with Albine but when his memory returns to him he ends the relationship
and returns to his former puritanical ways. Tragedy quickly
ensues...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.