Film Review
A haunting portrayal of repression and religious hypocrisy,
Jacques Rivette's beautifully rendered adaptation of Denis Diderot's
unfinished novel presages the director's later
Joan of Arc diptych and helped
to establish him as one of the leading lights of the French New
Wave. The subject of the film and the scandal it provoked were
appropriate for the time at which it was released, on the eve of the
massive youth rebellion of May 1968. Although set in the 18th
Century, the film proved to be highly relevant for the late
1960s.
The irony is that
La Religieuse,
a modest and austere historical drama, would most likely have passed without much
furore if various pressure groups (including associations of parents of
children in private education) had not put pressure on the Catholic
Church and the French government to have the film banned, even before
it was made. Jean-Luc Godard had previously mounted a stage
production of Diderot's novel in Paris, with Anna Karina in the leading
role, and this had not aroused the slightest whiff of
scandal. Despite growing opposition to the film, Rivette
succeeded in completing it, but permission to have it released in 1966
was revoked early that year. An outright ban on the film's
distribution was imposed by Yvon Bourges, the secretary of state at the
French Ministry of Information.
What then ensued was a fierce battle between the artistic
intelligentsia, led by Jean-Luc Godard, and representatives of the
Catholic Church, who were convinced the film was both blasphemous and
defamatory. Recently appointed Minister of Information,
André Malraux failed to prevent
La Religieuse from being shown at
the Cannes Film Festival in 1966 and his actions served merely to widen
the gulf between a government that was now appearing authoritarian and
out-of-touch and an increasingly fractious youth culture.
Although the ban was lifted in 1967, the film was rated with an 18
certification, which remained in force until 1975. When
La Religieuse was released in July
1967, it was a notable box office success, thanks to the widespread
publicity surrounding its banning.
Those who saw
La Religieuse
when it was first released must have been surprised by its content,
because there is nothing in this film to provoke scandal of the kind
that the Catholic Church feared. Faithful to Diderot's novel, the
film makes no direct comment on contemporary issues and is remarkably
restrained, playing down the lesbian theme and making it clear that it
condemns misguided individuals, not the Church or the Christian faith.
La Religieuse
is actually a highly moral film of the kind which the Catholic
Church should have endorsed, since it asserts the self-evident
truth that only those who have a genuine vocation
are fit to dedicate their lives to their religion.
It is hard to see how such an innocuous work could become the object
of a reactionary backlash. Indeed, this backlash says a good deal more about
the Church and its supporters than the film itself does.
In her most memorable screen role, Anna Karina gives a remarkable
and nuanced performance, offering a heart-wrenching depiction of crushed resistance
which must have resonated with her audience. Through her association with the directors
of the French New Wave (in particular, her then-husband Jean-Luc Godard),
Karina became closely identified with
the liberated modern woman of the 1960s, and so her casting in the lead role
of this film was an inspired and appropriate choice.
Karina's Suzanne Simonin represented a
free-thinking younger generation that had grown tired of being
oppressed and dictated to by an intolerant establishment.
Suzanne's act of rebellion would be played out for real across France
in the spring of 1968, bringing empowerment to the younger generation
and an early end to the De Gaulle presidency.
Both on screen and off,
La Religieuse
demonstrated that there is no greater stimulus for revolution than repression.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Jacques Rivette film:
L'Amour fou (1969)