Film Review
By the time he made
Le Blé en
herbe, adapted from Colette's scandalous 1923 novel, director
Claude Autant-Lara was no stranger to controversy. His previous
films
Le Diable au corps (1947) and
L'Auberge
rouge (1951) had fanned the flames of censure and were
labelled immoral by the rightwing press and the Catholic Church.
This was nothing compared with the outrage that
Le Blé en herbe ignited when
it was released in 1954, a film that was branded as having a
dangerously corrupting influence on the young. Both its director
and its leading actress, Edwige Feuillère, received threatening
letters of disapproval even before the film was completed - perhaps not
surprisingly, as the film attempted to breach one of the biggest taboos
of its time: the thorny issue of teenage sex.
The age of consent for a man being 21, the portrayal of a love affair
involving adolescents was as fiercely censured in film as it had been
for the past half a century in literature, so a film that explicitly
presented an amorous encounter between a sixteen year old boy and a
woman in her late forties was bound to fall foul of middleclass
morality. Yet for all the controversy that
Le Blé en herbe aroused, in
spite of the fact that several screenings were disrupted by violent
protests, it proved to be a major box office hit, attracting an
audience of just over three million. The film also garnered
critical acclaim in some quarters and was awarded the 1954 Grand prix
du cinéma français, the prestigious forerunner of the
Best Film César. It seems fitting that Claude
Autant-Lara's most controversial film should be one of his greatest
commercial and critical successes. Of all his films, it is the
one that has probably stood the test of time best, by virtue of its
subject matter and the honesty and delicacy with which Autant-Lara
tackles it.
Le Blé en herbe is
certainly a provocative film for its time. It begins with a
sequence which appears to have been conceived expressly to mock the
sensibilities of the bourgeoisie: a young man is washed up naked
on a beach in front of a party of schoolgirls and prim old ladies,
with predictable results. This is, of
course, merely a limbering up exercise for the shocks that are yet in
store for the po-faced subscriber to
Le
Figaro and other trenchantly conservative
publications. Not only do we get to see a pair of teenagers
talking about things which are the sole preserve of grown adults (and
only then in hushed whispers behind closed doors), but within no time
at all we are confronted with the shocking spectacle of a pretty
teenage boy being lured into the bed of a smouldering middle-aged woman
who is at least three times his age! The readers of
La Croix must have thought this was
the end of civilisation; if only heretic burning hadn't gone out of
fashion...
In their zeal to condemn the film for its supposedly immoral content,
its detractors failed to recognise its artistic merits, let alone
appreciate the immense sensitivity with which Autant-Lara and his
faithful screenwriters Pierre Bost and Jean Aurenche broached some very
delicate themes.
Le Blé
en herbe is one of the most authentic and poignant coming-of-age
films to have been made in France, one that is all the more powerful
because it leaves so much unsaid and does not demean itself (unlike
much of today's drama) with pointless audience titillation. A
first rate screenplay is well-served by some extraordinary performances
which powerfully convey the traumas and complexities of an illicit romantic
entanglement. In a performance that easily counts as one of her
best, Edwige Feuillère is not so much the calculating temptress
as a tragically vulnerable woman whose need for love, we imagine, far
surpasses that of the adolescent she ends up seducing. Little is
revealed about Feuillère's character, and much is left to our
imagination, but we sense that she is far more scarred by the amorous
encounter than is evident on screen.
By contrast, the feelings of the main teenage protagonist, Phil, are
broadcast with an almost deafening stridency, the maelstrom of
confusion, resentment, frustration and general hormonal overload being
vividly evoked by Feuillère's co-star Pierre-Michel Beck, one of
the forgotten talents of French cinema. Beck had previously
featured in two similarly groundbreaking films - Jean Delannoy's
Le Garçon sauvage (1951) and
Lionello De Felice's
L'Età
dell'amore (1953) - and has something of the young Marlon Brando
or James Dean about him. Beck's unpolished performance, burnished
with raw emotions that betray an incongruous mix of primal savagery and
well-developed sensitivity, is perhaps the most striking thing about
this film, giving it more than just a patina of New Wave
modernity. Had Beck gone on to make more films, instead of ending
his screen career here, he would doubtless have become one of the
greatest French actors of his generation. Posterity has been a
little kinder to his young co-star Nicole Berger, whose stunning
presence in
Le Blé en herbe
gave her a boost at the start of her career (a career that was
tragically cut short when the actress died, aged 32, after being
fatally injured in a car accident). One of the most beautiful
aspects of
Le Blé en herbe
is the degree to which Beck and Berger complement one another, the
pent-up aggression and gauche insecurity of the one gradually subdued by the sublime
tenderness of the other, as a modern retelling of the
Beauty and the Beast fable.
By the mid-1950s, Claude Autant-Lara had become identified, in the
minds of some reviewers (including many of those who went on to become
directors of the French New Wave), as being out-dated and out-of-touch.
If there is one film that confounds this absurdly simplistic
characterisation it is surely
Le
Blé en herbe, one of the most daring French films of the
decade and one of the few to tackle the theme of adolescent sexual
awakening with the sensitivity and seriousness it merits. The
film may try a little too hard to match the production values of the
contemporary Hollywood-style melodrama, but beneath the surface gloss
and slightly dated cinematic conventions there is something that a
modern audience can still engage with - a powerful and timeless story
about two young people making the painful transition to adulthood, alone
in a world that offers them little in the way of guidance or
consolation. It's a familiar story, one that has been expressed
in film a thousand times since, but rarely with as much conviction and
poetry.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Autant-Lara film:
Le Rouge et le noir (1954)
Film Synopsis
Some time in the 1920s, the Ferrets and their two daughters, Vinca and
Lisette, spend their summer holiday on the coast of Brittany. As
is their custom, they are accompanied by a friend, Madame Audebert, and
her son Philippe. Vinca and Phil are almost brother and sister,
but now that he is 16 and she is 15 their feelings for one another are
beginning to change. Neither can understand what is happening to
them, why their seemingly harmless disputes should leave them with so
much hurt and regret. Neither is yet ready to acknowledge
the truth, that they have started to fall in love. To complicate
matters, Phil finds himself strangely attracted to an older woman,
Madame Dallery, the tenant of a grand holiday home further up the
coast. Although the woman is thirty years his senior, Phil cannot
help being drawn to her, as if she holds the key to the mysteries of
love. Grateful for the teenager's attentions, Madame
Dallery takes it upon herself to indoctrinate him in the ways of love...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.