Film Review
Le Cri de la soie was the first feature-length film to be directed
by Yvon Marciano. A very unusual kind of romantic drama, it is a loosely
based on the true-life story of Gaëtan Gatian de Clérambault,
an eminent psychiatrist and photographer of the early 1900s. The film
is unusual in that it deals openly and honestly with fetishism, a subject
that was a taboo subject at the time, and virtually remains so to this day.
The only other film of note to tackle the same subject was
Marie-poupée (1976), although
this effectively derailed the career of its promising auteur director, Joël
Séria..
The most interesting aspect of
Le Cri de la soie is the relationship
that slowly develops between its central character, a psychiatrist, and the
strange young woman for whom he develops an almost obsessive interest, one
which turns out to be as strong as her fetishistic affinity for silk. Although
languorously paced and directed with modest artistry, the film holds the
attention, mainly on the strength of the performances from the two charismatic
lead actors - Sergio Castellitto (perhaps better known for his collaborations
with Jacques Rivette,
Va savoir
(2001) and
36 vues du Pic
Saint-Loup (2009)) and Marie Trintignant (daughter of the esteemed
actor Jean-Louis Trintignant, who specialised in this kind of unconventional
role). The latter is particularly beguiling in this film, in a made-to-measure
role that earned her a worthy César nomination.
It would be another thirteen years before Yvon Marciano made his next feature,
Vivre! (2009). For the bulk of his career, he was content making
short films, most notably
La Face cachée de la Lune (1986),
Émilie Muller (1993) and
La Part de l'ombre (1999),
which each won an award.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1914, an uneducated young woman named Marie Benjamin is arrested after
stealing some silk from a Parisian department store. The police are
unable to make anything of Marie's fascination for her stolen object, which
shows signs of extreme fetishism, so a leading psychiatrist, Gabriel de Villemer,
is called in to study her. In the course of their interviews, Gabriel
discovers that Marie has an erotic obsession for silk which compensates for
her lack of interest in the male sex. Gradually, the psychiatrist comes
to share his subject's response to fine fabrics and, even though they have
nothing in common, he and Marie develop a close and intense relationship.
With Gabriel away fighting against the Germans in North Africa, Marie's shoplifting
habit soon leads her to prison, where she uses her time of incarceration profitably
to learn to read and write. Once the war is over, Gabriel publishes
his write-up of Marie's unusual case and is surprised when, one day, the
mysterious woman suddenly enters his life again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.