Film Review
After the phenomenal success of
Jules et Jim (1962),
François Truffaut's filmmaking career suffered a
prolonged period of abeyance as the director struggled to get
his dream project - a French film adaptation of Ray Bradbury's
Fahrenheit
451 - off the ground.
It was whilst trying to find a
backer for this film that he undertook his series of interviews with
Alfred Hitchcock, which he subsequently published to great
acclaim. To ensure that his film production company
remained solvent as he waited for
Fahrenheit
451 to see the light of day, Truffaut decided to knock out a
low budget film. That film was
La
Peau douce, his fourth and probably most underrated feature.
La Peau douce could hardly
have made a more striking contrast with Truffaut's previous film,
although both revolve around the same idea, the tragic love
triangle. Lacking the vitality, bravado and manic emotional
swings of
Jules et Jim,
La Peau douce is a far more
introspective, gloomier affair that is steeped in melancholia and bitter irony. Although some
parts of the scenario were based on real-life events reported
in the newspapers (including the
dramatic denouement), much is taken from Truffaut's own life, with the
result that this is one of the director's most personal films.
Not long before making
La Peau douce,
Truffaut had pursued short-term amorous liaisons with Liliane David and
Marie-France Pisier, which resulted in the painful breakdown of his
marriage to Madeleine Morgenstern. The male protagonist Pierre
Lachenay (superbly portrayed by Jean Desailly) is a timid intellectual
who is susceptible to attractive women - clearly Truffaut in all but
name. Truffaut even used his own Parisian apartment as the set
for the Lachenay household (primarily to save money). Whilst most
of Truffaut's films have a strong auto-biographical element, few are so
closely wedded to the director's own real-life experiences as this
one. Françoise Dorléac not only played the
mistress of Truffaut's on-screen alter ego, she would also enchant him
in real life, as well she might with her intoxicating charisma, charm and
beauty. This, together with Truffaut's near-psychotic
antipathy for Desailly (who in turn grew to loathe the director and
blamed him for wrecking his career) resulted in this being an extremely
fraught production. Dorléac's death in a car accident a
few years after making this film came as a devastating blow to the
sensitive filmmaker who had hoped to make her a great film actress.
There was little consolation to be had from the fact that he had
given Dorléac her one great screen role.
It is hardly surprising that, having been immersed in the world of
Hitchcock for many months prior to making this film, Truffaut should
end up employing various Hitchcockian motifs. Indeed, there are
several sequences where
La Peau douce
feels far more like a suspense thriller than a romantic drama.
The race to the airport at the start of the film is an obvious homage
to
Psycho
(1960), a frantic car journey that will lead inevitably to disaster,
whilst the scenes at the Lisbon Hotel, where Lachenay begins his
illicit romance, clearly owe something to
Vertigo
(1958), as the protagonist is haunted by his conception of
the perfect woman. Tacitly avoiding the conventions of the
traditional film melodrama,
La Peau
douce is a daring attempt to present, with an almost visceral
integrity, the personal torment experienced by each player in a
romantic love triangle. From the perspective of each of the three
protagonists, we are shown how an inconsequential love affair can
mushroom into a nerve-wracking, poisonous ordeal, as that other eternal
triangle - desire, guilt and jealousy - do their worst and wreak havoc
on three previously sane, well-ordered lives.
La Peau douce is arguably the
boldest and most experimental of Truffaut's films. It broaches
the then controversial subject of adultery with a surprising candour,
sparing the audience few of the emotional crises that marital
infidelity can cause in real life. Truffaut himself described the
film as the autopsy of a couple, a hopeless situation that has no
solution, no way out. The film's relentlessly morbid
tone proved to be its downfall, however. After a disastrous
premiere at Cannes,
La Peau douce
was censured by the critics and ended up a box office
disaster. His confidence badly shaken by this failure, the
thin-skinned Truffaut was keen to distance himself from the film,
although some reviewers (notably his former friends on the
Cahiers du cinéma) saw that
it had considerable merit and the film was a surprising hit in
Scandinavia. Today,
La Peau
douce is regarded far more favourably and occupies an essential
place in Truffaut's oeuvre, completing the Nouvelle Vague phase of his
career and anticipating the darker, more intimate romantic dramas that
would come to dominate his later years.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next François Truffaut film:
Fahrenheit 451 (1966)