Film Review
In the mid-1950s, few film directors made a greater impression on the
controversial young critics on the French film review paper
Les Cahiers du cinéma than a
certain Englishman who had made a name for himself in Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock.
At the time, despite some notable box office successes, Hitchcock
was not considered a serious filmmaker, and it was pretty well down to
some of these French critics (Claude Chabrol, Eric Rohmer and François Truffaut)
that he was able to achieve the recognition he deserved
in his lifetime. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that when several
of these same critics became filmmakers, they would attempt to emulate
Hitchcock's technique in their own films. Imitation is, after
all, the sincerest form of flattery (as the plagiarist said to the judge).
Of the French New Wave film directors, the most fervent admirer of
Hitchcock's work was François Truffaut.
La Mariée était en noir
is Truffaut's first and most obvious homage to Hitchcock, made almost immediately after
he published his famous series of interviews with the great English
filmmaker. The film not only beautifully replicates Hitchcock's
cinematographic style (notably the skilful use of subjective shots and
montage to build tension and suspense) but it also has something of his
mischievously dark humour. And if the music sounds more than
vaguely Hitchcockian that is probably because it was composed by
none other than Bernard Herrmann, the man who scored several of Hitchcock's best films.
Of course, the film also bears Truffaut's
own very distinctive imprint, in its subtle eroticism, its intense
depiction of uncontrollable passions and the references to the
director's own obsession with the female sex.
La Mariée était en noir
is a stylish and entertaining work that combines suspense thriller and
black comedy to great effect. Jeanne Moreau (who featured in
Truffaut's earlier
Jules and Jim), is superlative
as the bordello-scented lady killer, probably her sexiest screen portrayal
(and certainly her funniest). The story is taken from a novel by William Irish, a
writer who fascinated Truffaut and who would provide the subject for
one of his later films,
La Sirène du Mississippi.
Hitchcock's film
Rear Window (1954) was also based on one of Irish's stories.
La Mariée était en noir
is significant in that it marked the final collaboration of
François Truffaut with his talented photography director, Raoul
Coutard. The two men parted on bad terms after a series of
heated disagreements. They had worked together since
Tirez sur le pianiste (1960)
and Coutard deserves to receive as much credit for the look and
popularity of Truffaut's early films as the director himself.
Although it is somewhat less well regarded and less well-known than
many of Truffaut's film's today,
La
Mariée était en noir was very well-received on its
first release. It is an enjoyable Hitchcockian concoction of "sex,
murder and mayhem", laden with plenty of Nouvelle Vague sauce - in short,
a cinephile's delight.
© James Travers 2008
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Next François Truffaut film:
Baisers volés (1968)
Film Synopsis
At a party to celebrate his engagement, a young man named Bliss is
drawn to a mysterious woman he has never seen before but who seems to
know him. Minutes later he is dead, having fallen from a top
floor balcony. Coral, a solitary middle-aged bachelor, is
pleasantly surprised to receive an invitation to a concert by an
unknown woman. It proves to be a short-lived liaison.
Before he dies, the woman, Julie Kohler, tells Coral why she had to
kill him. On her wedding day, the man she cherished was shot dead
on the church steps. The man who fired the fatal bullet was one
of five friends who were playing around with a rifle. Today,
Julie has only one reason for living - to track down and kill the five
men who have ruined her life. Two down, three to go...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.