Film Review
Based on the novella
Ar Follez
yaouank by the nationalist Breton writer Fant Rozec,
La Jeune folle fits easily into
Yves Allégret's series of fatalistic film noir dramas that
includes
Dédée d'Anvers
(1948) and
Manèges
(1950).
One of Allégret's darkest films, it owes
much of its brooding, doom-laden atmosphere to set designer Alexandre
Trauner, who achieved similar results on Marcel Carné's
Quai des brumes (1938).
Here the claustrophobic setting is not the mist-shrouded port of
Le Havre but an eerily oppressive
visualisation of Dublin in the 1920s. A French film about the
Irish Revolution is a strange thing indeed and a certain degree of
suspension of disbelief is required when presented with an Ireland in
which everyone speaks French and where the streets echo with the sound
of children singing 'Alouette, gentille alouette'. A greater
failing is that the film has very little of the distinctive poetry of
Rozec's original work, but what it does have by way of compensation is
an extraordinary central performance by Danièle Delorme.
Delorme's potential as an actress had already been revealed in
Gigi (1949) and
Miquette et sa mère
(1950) but it wasn't until
La Jeune
folle that she had her first great role, harrowingly convincing
as an abused, easily manipulated orphan girl prone to delusional
fantasies. Allégret's film would have been bleak enough by
virtue of its subject matter but Delorme's realistic portrayal of an
innocent's slow and unavoidable descent into insanity makes it
memorably grim.
In some scenes, the emotional martyrdom of
Delorme's character recalls the quiet suffering of Joan of Arc in
Dreyer's
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc
(1928), an impression that is reinforced by some saint-like portraits
of the doomed heroine when confronted with the evils of the
world. How easy it is to overlook the performances from Henri
Vidal and Maurice Ronet when our attention is totally monopolised by an
actress who has attained the zenith of her art and delivers a
performance of such exquisite poignancy.
The fate of Delorme's character Catherine powerfully symbolises the
future of a divided Ireland, although Allégret uses the film not
to make a political statement but to explore the irrationality of
humankind. In a sequence that recalls the dark lyricism of the
director's earlier
Une si jolie petite plage, a
young republican is led down a stretch of beach and then cold-bloodedly
shot dead by two of his comrades.
Later, the heroine makes an impetuous vow to kill the man who murdered her beloved brother, not
knowing that her intended victim is the man she has already fallen in
love with. Driven by the follies of revolution and piety, friend
kills friend and lover kills lover, because in this insane whirlwind of
confusion an abstract idea becomes more important than human
life. The abject tragedy of the human condition is succinctly
summed up in the film's final shot of Catherine's broken face as her
last fragments of reason slip away from her. It is one of the
most powerful endings to any French film, the Medusa visage that once
seen will haunt the spectator forever.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2014
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Next Yves Allégret film:
Les Sept péchés capitaux (1952)
Film Synopsis
Ireland 1922. A nationalist uprising against England has claimed
its first victims. As she performs her domestic chores at a
Dublin convent, orphan Catherine thinks only of her brother Kevin, a
Republican who is on the run from the government forces. As she
is excessively sensitive and suffers from hallucinations, Catherine is
known by everyone as the 'young mad woman'. One evening, she
imagines hearing her brother calling to her in her dreams and decides
there and then to run away and head for the capital. In fact,
Kevin has already been shot at dawn as a traitor to the revolutionary
cause. Three of his companions - Jim, Tom and Steve - welcome the
distraught girl, but opt to keep from her the truth about her brother's
death. Having fallen in love with Catherine, Steve takes her back
to the convent, but by a strange coincidence the brother of the mother
superior is also killed the same day for supporting the rebels...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.