Film Review
A decade and a half before director Milos Forman made a spirited
condemnation of American society's treatment of the mentally ill in his
multi-Oscar winning
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
(1975), a comparatively obscure French film trod similar ground, but
failed to have anything like the impact.
La Tête contre les murs was
intended to draw the public's attention to the kind of psychiatric
practices that were known to exist in contemporary France - the most
shocking being the enforced incarceration of healthy individuals in
mental institutions by their unscrupulous relatives. The film
also deals with some wider societal issues, such as the growing
division between the generations, a theme that would underpin much of
the work of the incipient French New Wave.
La Tête contre les murs
certainly doesn't pull any punches in its depiction of the kind of
psychiatric care that was prevalent at the time (and that's
care in the deeply ironic,
Orwellian sense of the word). The film has been dismissed as
being overly sensational in some quarters and at times it does feel
a tad didactic. Nonetheless, it offers a powerful examination
of what continues to be an important social concern, namely how the
mentally ill are to be treated. The two prevailing schools
of thought are presented to us, with the kind of restraint and measured
impartiality that we can expect to find in a rabidly right-wing tabloid
newspaper. A Dr Crippen-like fiend (Pierre Brasseur) assures us
that the mentally ill are a danger to society and should therefore be
incarcerated until the day they die. Meanwhile, his saintly counterpart
(Paul Meurisse) is equally adamant (but with a nice smile, softer
voice and much better tailor) that mental illness is curable and that the aim should be to
treat its victims so that they can go on to live reasonably normal
lives within society. Five decades on, the same debate still
rages. Mental illness remains both a stigma and an unsolved
problem.
The film was the result of one of the most improbable collaborations in
French cinema. Jean-Pierre Mocky, an established actor, was keen
to begin a career as a film director and, having read Hervé
Bazin's semi-biographical novel, he found an ideal subject for his
first film. Although he had written a complete screenplay, Mocky
was unable to find a producer who had confidence in him. The
controversial nature of the proposed film's subject matter was also a
stumbling block - just who would pay to watch a film about abuse in a
mental institution? Mocky finally secured financial backing after
he had talked Georges Franju, a well-regarded director of documentary
shorts, into directing the film. (He later approached
the legendary screenwriter Jacques Prévert to write
the dialogue, but went elsewhere when Prévert demanded
an exorbitant fee.)
It is a matter of conjecture as two which of these two men had the
greater creative control over the film. Franju's imprint is
readily apparent in the film's striking visual style, its unsettling
mix of realism and dreamlike poetry. On the other hand, Mocky not
only co-wrote the script (with playwright Jean-Charles Pichon), he also chose all of the actors who appeared in
the film and cast himself in the principal role. Mocky recalls
that during the making of the film he was called upon to direct several
scenes when Franju suffered a temporary mental collapse after
witnessing an inmate in a real psychiatric institution attack another
inmate with a razor blade.
The seismic conflicts that ripple though the narrative - between the
pre-and post-WWII generations, between the psychiatric doctors and
their patients, and also between the doctors themselves - are
underscored by the obvious conflict of approaches that Franju and Mocky
bring to the film. In his late forties, Franju was a traditional
kind of filmmaker who had little affinity with the younger generation
that Mocky so obviously represented. By contrast, Mocky was a
rebel and agent provocateur, even at this early stage in his career,
and was closer in spirit to the New Wave auteur filmmakers, represented
by François Truffaut, Jacques Rivette and Jean-Luc
Godard. Given the scale of the difference in their
personalities, interests and artistic styles, it is incredible that
Franju and Mocky were able to work together and craft such a coherent
and alluring piece of cinema.
One of the main strengths of
La
Tête contre les murs is its prestigious cast list, which
included established actors of the calibre of Pierre Brasseur and Paul
Meurisse, rising stars such as Anouk Aimée, and popular
chansonnier Charles Aznavour in his first substantial dramatic film role.
Despite having had next to no prior acting experience, Aznavour manages
to be pretty well the star of the film; his arresting portrayal of a
lonely epileptic made him the recipient of that year's Crystal Star
Award (the precursor to the César) for Best Actor.
By contrast, it is difficult to warm to Jean-Pierre Mocky's
interpretation of a juvenile delinquent, since the part calls for much
great vulnerability than the actor is able to project. Brasseur
would virtually reprise his role as the sinister medical man in
Franju's subsequent
Les Yeux sans visage (1960),
which is widely regarded as the most frightening horror film made in
France.
Another notable contributor to the film is Eugen
Schüfftan, the renowned cinematographer who began his career working with such creative giants
as Fritz Lang and Abel Gance in the 1920s. Schüfftan
brings some characteristically bold expressionistic touches (including oblique camera
angles and use of intense blocks of shadow, à la classic film
noir) that add greatly to the sense of menace that pervades the
film. This is most effective in the chilling climax, which evokes
something of the endless silent scream of Edvard Munch's famous
painting as the helpless protagonist is drawn into the Kafkaesque web
of doom for the last time. Maurice Jarre's eerie score also has
an expressionistic resonance, although it does occasionally jar with
the mix of realism and poetry that Franju and Mocky seem to be striving
for.
Stylistically and thematically,
La
Tête contre les murs is something of a mongrel, a strained
collaborative effort in which its various artistic talents can be seen,
too visibly, to be pulling in different directions. The film also
suffers from a slight lack of dramatic impetus and characterisation
that barely rises above the superficial. Yet, for all this, it
still manages to be a hugely compelling work, an engaging social drama
that tackles a serious subject with compassion, eloquence and
intelligence. However we judge the film on its artistic merits,
it cannot be denied that it has made a significant contribution to the
debate on how mental illness is to be treated, a debate that continues
to this day.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2010
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Next Georges Franju film:
Les Yeux sans visage (1960)