Film Review
In common with many of Réne Clément's
films of the early 1950s,
Le Château de verre
has the characteristics of a transition piece, a film that spans the
gulf between between the star-driven quality
tradition of French cinema, that had achieved its zenith in the late
1940s, and the auteur-driven modernist trend that came with the French New Wave in the
late 1950s.
At first sight, this film appears to be a conventional melodrama, but look a little closer and you will see that
it is quite a subversive film for its time.
One of the hallmarks of Clément's films from this period is
the use of natural locations to give an impression of
realism and immediacy that
was lacking in the largely studio-bound productions of his
contemporaries. The camerawork,
which includes long tracking shots and spectacular wide-angle bird's eye shots, brings an almost
documentary-feel, an approach which the directors of the Nouvelle Vague
would use extensively in their films in attempt to break away from the stuffy studio
traditions of the past. The film was adapted from a novel
by the celebrated Austrian writer Vicki Baum, whose most famous work,
Menschen im Hotel, had previously been adapted as
Grand Hotel in 1932.
What is particularly daring about this film is its unusual narrative
construction.
Breaking with the conventional linear approach, Clément takes the ending
and boldly inserts it near the middle of the film, so that the denouement ceases to be a denouement
but instead becomes a portent of doom. This
is achieved ingeniously by having the lead character, played by
Michèle Morgan, move the hands on her wristwatch forward a few hours.
The future she imagines is quite unlike the one we see,
which is a grim tragedy that compels us to see the rest of the film in
a completely different light.
This departure from the linear narrative approach and
playing with time and memory naturally brings to mind the films of
Alain Resnais, one of the most innovative of the French New Wave directors.
Indeed, it is hard not to watch this film
and see similarities with Resnais'
L'Année dernière à
Marienbad (1961), a
startlingly dreamlike film in which our notions of time and space are
dispensed with altogether.
René Clément made
Le
Château de verre between two of his
biggest critical successes,
Au-delà des grilles
(1949) and
Jeux interdits
(1952), which were both recipients of the Best Foreign Film Oscar.
This could explain why the film is one of the
director's least known works today, even though it was highly regarded
on its initial release. The high calibre cast includes
two of French cinema's greatest icons, Michèle Morgan and Jean
Marais, who not
only turn in two spellbinding performances but also give the film a
heartrending poignancy. The film may
not be as intense and visually arresting as some of Clément's
subsequent films,
but it is nonetheless a compelling piece, crafted with skill and
sensitivity by one of the true auteurs of French cinema.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2009
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Next René Clément film:
Jeux interdits (1952)
Film Synopsis
Evelyne Bertal could not be happier, living the kind of life most people
would envy in Berne with her devoted husband Laurent, a lawyer. She
seems to be settled for life and knows that she could never fall for another
man - until she meets Rémy Marsay, a seductive Frenchman. The
encounter happens when Evelyne is holidaying in Italy with her friend Elena.
For Rémy, it is just another holiday romance, and once he has had
his fun he is back on his way to Paris to rejoin his mistress Marion, the
liaison soon forgotten. For Evelyne, however, the unwished-for affair
has a far greater impact and she is convinced she has fallen in love.
Evelyne is encouraged that Rémy feels the same way about her when
he sends her an invitation to spend a weekend with him in Paris. Despite
her devotion to Laurent, she cannot resist joining her secret lover, and
by the end of the weekend Evelyne is certain that she has found her ideal
partner. Before she heads back home, she notices a glass ornament in
the shape of a castle. Carelessly, she breaks the object and, in doing
so, she takes this as sign that in pursuing Rémy she may be ruining
her own life. She makes up her mind to end the affair there and then
and confess everything to her husband. Unfortunately, she has misread
the omen...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.