Film Review
After the lavish period piece
Une vie
(1958), a conventional but pretty solid adaptation of a well-known Guy de
Maupassant novella, director Alexandre Astruc returned to the flimsy modernist
form of his earlier
Les
Mauvaises rencontres (1955), the film that won him both critical
acclaim and a prize at the Venice Film Festival. By now, the Nouvelle
Vague had taken its toll (for good or ill) on French cinema and Astruc obviously
felt he had to move with the times.
La Proie pour l'ombre is
a film with some merit but it suffers from being a tad too self-conscious
attempt to imitate the style of the director's New Wave contemporaries, with
sequences that look as if they have been lifted wholesale from similar films
by Alain Resnais, Louis Malle and Jean-Luc Godard. Imitation may be
the sincerest form of flattery, but Astruc devalues sincerity greatly by
being so flagrant in his stylistic mimicry.
At least
La Proie pour l'ombre has more directorial restraint and
substance to it than the painfully vacuous, over-directed
Les Mauvaises
rencontres. It makes a serious, albeit somewhat ambiguous, attempt
to engage with the then highly topical themes of female emancipation and
the worth of marriage. The fraught nature of male-female relationships
in the midst of the sexual revolution is palpably expressed, although no
sensible answers are given and the film's conclusion - which implies a woman
can never be fulfilled as a wife - is more than mildly depressing.
It's a film that provokes thought but leads you nowhere and in the end the
protagonists appear as shallow and idealistic as any that the New Wave directors
foisted upon us. It's not life but a vague, ill-defined imitation of
life, of the kind you would expect to be posited by a cynic or emotional
inadequate who cannot come to grips with the complexities and contradictions
of human desire.
Although
La Proie pour l'ombre was far less well-received than Astruc's
earlier modernist offering, it is much easier to engage with, partly because
it is better directed (with far less of the off-putting pretentiousness),
but mainly because of its compelling central performance from Annie Girardot,
whose career was well and truly on the up after her breakthrough role in
Luchino Visconti's
Rocco
and His Brothers (1960). For the remainder of her career, Giradot
would become pretty well typecast as the tough, independently minded modern
woman, a beacon of feminism in later years, and she is perfectly suited for
the role of Anna, a woman who feels impelled to give up romantic love for
some indefinable, inexpressible notion of freedom. (The film's title
derives from the French expression
lâcher la proie pour l'ombre,
which means to give up something tangible for something illusory).
Fine actors though they are, Daniel Gélin and Christian Marquand struggle
to make their characters - both conventional macho types who believe a woman
should be subordinated to their will (as society expects) - sympathetic or
even convincing. Of the three main characters, only Giradot's rings
true, and even though her behaviour is at times hard to fathom, we are forced
to sympathise with Anna's dilemma and her frustration at finding the kind
of life that suits her, one in which she has both a career and a man willing
to respect her need for freedom and independence. The fact that both
Gélin and Marquand's characters turn out to be Alpha Males cut from
the same cloth, both willing to strike a woman or bawl in her ears if she
refuses to submit to their masculine superiority, is disappointing and you
are left with the depressing thought that Anna has only two options open
to her: solitude or slavery. Solitude looks preferable.
© James Travers 2016
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Film Synopsis
Anna, 27, has been married to Eric, a successful architect, for five years.
She wants to have a life of her own rather than being completely dependent
on her husband, so she takes over the management of an art gallery bought
for her by Eric. Even this does not satisfy her, though. One
day, she meets a handsome young man Bruno, who works for a record company,
and the two embark on a passionate love affair. Encouraged by Bruno,
Anna finally makes up her mind to leave her husband, and after threatening
to take her gallery away from her, Eric finally gives in to her request for
a separation. It is only once she had found her freedom that Anna realises
that she is falling into the same trap with Bruno. She cannot bring
herself to make the same mistake again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.