Film Review
Le Cheval d'orgueil is an
atypical film for Claude Chabrol, the French New Wave director who is
better known for his slick psychological thrillers that have earned him
the epithet "the French Alfred Hitchcock" - films such as
Le Boucher (1970) and
La Cérémonie (1995).
This film gets tantalisingly close to providing an authentic depiction of the life of
ordinary Breton peasants at the beginning of the Twentieth Century,
but, despite its near-documentary approach, it doesn't quite make
it. The film was badly received by the critics and is often
overlooked by even the most fervent admirers of Chabrol's work.
Chabrol himself regretted not having recorded the film with Breton
dialogue, since this is one of the reasons why the film feels slightly
phoney.
To its credit, the film does given an insight into how ordinary folk
lived in a rural community in the early 1900s. It reminds us just
how much has changed in the last century, how much living standards
have improved, how much we have to be grateful for. Without
washing machines, the womenfolk had to spend hours beating cleanliness
into household linen and clothes with wooden bats. Without modern
farm machinery, the men had to toil from dawn to dusk, reaping the
harvest and threshing wheat by hand. As a pictorial account of
how our forebears lived, the film is both educative and poignant.
The problem is that Chabrol fails to get much beyond this instructive
backdrop and the film is little more than a picture postcard from a
bygone era. The central drama, involving a typical Breton family,
doesn't connect with the audience. The characters are
interesting, and well-portrayed by some talented actors, but we do not
engage with them. Chabrol's direction is as cold, detached and
remote as the subject matter, and if you are looking for more than a
documentary the film quickly loses its appeal. However, imperfect
as it is,
Le Cheval d'orgueil
is well worth watching, if only to remind ourselves how unremittingly
tough life was, barely three generations back.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Claude Chabrol film:
Les Fantômes du chapelier (1982)
Film Synopsis
Pierre-Jakez Helias recounts his childhood experience from 1908 to 1918. Growing
up in a small Brittany village, Helias recalls with affection his father Pierre-Alain
and mother Anne-Marie. Life in this tightly knit peasant community is hard and death
is never far away. Then war breaks out and Pierre-Alain is mobilised, leaving his
wife to support her family alone...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.