Film Review
For much of his career, Claude Autant-Lara had the distinction of being
the most controversial French film director of his time. Just
before he made what he considered his most daring film,
Tu ne tueras point, he released
Le Bois des amants, one of his
lesser known war-time dramas. The film tells the story of an
impossible love affair between a French resistance member and a married
German woman, who manage to snatch a few moments of happiness whilst
being conflicted by their sense of duty.
The period of Nazi occupation was one of Autant-Lara's favourite
subjects and features prominently in many of his films, most notably
the classic comedy
La Traversée de Paris
(1956). Four years on from this highpoint there is no doubt that
the director's golden period of the 1950s is already behind him.
This cruel, disillusioned fable on a familiar theme is clearly a lesser
work; it lacks sparkle and much of the dialogue is uninspired; yet, in
common with the bulk of this maverick director's work, it is not
without interest, particularly as it offers a sombre reflection on one
of France's bleakest periods. As in the case of two other films
that Autant-Lara made around this
time,
Les Régates de San
Francisco (1960) and
Vive
Henri IV... vive
l'amour! (1961),
Le Bois des
amants suffered badly at the hands of the
critics and the proponents of the Nouvelle Vague, who saw the
film as stilted and dated.
Whilst the film is let down somewhat by its screenwriting, it does have
some artistic strengths. In particular, it is beautifully
photographed, as you would expect for a director with a keen visual
flair and eye for detail. This is most apparent in two remarkable
scenes: the one depicting Christmas Eve at the Kommandantur, and the
one set in the church, where we hear the mechanical pounding of the
German soldiers' boots as they pass by outside. Despite an
impressive reconstruction of a Breton village, Autant-Lara was
criticised for relying too heavily on the studios instead of making use
of real exterior locations, although this appears not to be diminish
the dramatic authenticity of the film's key scenes.
Heading an impressive cast is a young Laurent Terzieff, well-chosen to
play an ironic resistance member who makes the cardinal sin of falling
in love with the enemy. The part of the German wife is
convincingly portrayed by the Austrian actress Erika Remberg (who was
seen the same year in Sydney Hayers'
Circus
of Horrors), although Romy Schneider might have been a better
casting choice on account of her innocence and vulnerability. The
extraordinary Françoise Rosay (who had previously served
Autant-Lara well on
L'Auberge rouge) is far better
suited to play the innkeeper, giving the character the backbone and
melancholy the part demands. Gert Fröebe's German officer
may veer towards caricature but the actor brings authenticity and depth
to his portrayal, whilst Horst Frank makes his mark as a
larger-than-life SS colonel.
In
Le Bois des amants, Claude
Autant-Lara attempts to combine the two main themes of his earlier
masterpieces: forbidden love (
Le Diable au corps) and the
Nazi Occupation (
La Traversée
de Paris). The result may appear slight when compared with
the other films the director made during his remarkable career but it
is nonetheless an engaging and humane drama, sensitively portrayed by a
distinguished cast and exquisitely photographed. The film is now
available on DVD but the distributors have omitted to subtitle the
German dialogue, making several scenes in the film unintelligible to a
non-German speaking audience.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
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Next Claude Autant-Lara film:
Les Régates de San Francisco (1960)
Film Synopsis
Brittany, Christmas 1943. Herta von Stauffen, a German soldier,
makes an attempt to join her husband, Colonel von Stauffen, whom she
has not seen since their wedding day. But Von Stauffen has orders
to celebrate Christmas with his troops and so Herta is sent to the
house of the widow Parisot, an old woman who regards Herta as an enemy
because she is a German. That evening, a Frenchman lands by
parachute in the nearby woods. His mission is to prepare for an
attack by British soldiers. This man is Charles, the son of
Madame Parisot, whose home offers a natural hiding place.
Neglected by her husband, Herta begins to fall in love with Charles.
Events take an explosive turn when
Colonel Von Stauffen gives the order for the mysterious parachutist to
be found...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.