Film Review
Even as late as the 1970s, the Nazi Occupation of France was a subject
that had been seldom explored in French cinema. Those few films
that had broached
les années
noires (1940-1944) tended to focus on the heroism of those who
had worked in the resistance and the venality of those who had
collaborated with the occupying Germans.
Marcel Ophüls's landmark documentary
Le Chagrin et la pitié
(1969) came as something of a revelation, since it implied that real
life as experienced by most people in France during the Occupation was
nothing like what had been portrayed in films. The majority of
the population were neither heroes nor villains. Most people went
on with their lives as best they could, neither supporting nor opposing
the occupation - just muddling through.
It is this facet of the Occupation that director François
Truffaut had long wanted to bring to the screen. One of his
biggest regrets was that he had not been able to set his
Les 400 coups (1959) during the
war years, when he had been an adolescent growing up in
occupied Paris. When he came to make
Le Dernier métro, Truffaut
was determined to portray the period as authentically as possible, and
in doing so he paved the way for the numerous films set during the
Occupation that were subsequently made. The director drew not
only on his own vivid memories but undertook extensive research with
his frequent script collaborator Suzanne Schiffman, trawling historical
documents, memoirs and books of the time. The title
that Truffaut chose for the film
alludes to one of the darker aspects of Parisian life during the Occupation:
anyone who missed the last train home and was found in the streets
during the curfew hours faced being arrested and
possibly deported. The film's accuracy and
attention to detail make it a useful point of reference for any student
of this era.
As well as the Occupation,
Le
Dernier métro embraced another aspect of life that
Truffaut was keen to explore - the world of the theatre. After
La Nuit américaine
(1973), a light-hearted but illuminating portrait of the fraught
process of filmmaking, Truffaut envisaged making two further films
about show business, one set in the theatre, the other in the music
hall. Regrettably, the director's premature death in 1984
prevented him from completing the trilogy with
L'Agence magic, his homage to
the lost art of vaudeville.
In developing the screenplay for
Le
Dernier métro, Truffaut was greatly influenced by Jean
Renoir's play
Carola (adapted
as an American TV film in 1973) and Ernst Lubitsch's film
To Be or Not to Be (1942), although
many of the characters in his film were based on real people. The
story of the theatre owners Marion and Lucas Steiner was inspired by
the real-life experiences of the dancer Margaret Leibovici (aka Miss
Bluebell) and her composer husband Marcel, who were employed at the Folies
Bergère. The theatre critic Daxiat (superbly played by
Jean-Louis Richard, a frequent co-scénariste of Truffaut) is
closely modelled on the notorious anti-Semitic journalist Alain
Laubreaux, whose run-in with Jean Marais (after the former had
published a vicious critique of Jean Cocteau) is recreated in the
film. The arrest of the character Jean-Louis Cottins after the
Liberation mirrors the fate of the playwright and actor Sacha Guitry, a
man whom Truffaut greatly admired.
Le Dernier métro would
be François Truffaut's most expensive production, one which was
way beyond the resources of his production company Les Films du
Carrosse. Having secured a budget of eleven million francs with
the backing of Gaumont and the French TV station TF1, Truffaut was
obligated to cast two stars for the leading roles, something he had not
done since his disastrous 1969 film
La Sirène du Mississippi.
Perversely, Truffaut offered the lead actress of that film, Catherine
Deneuve, the main role in
Le Dernier
métro, so convinced was he that she was perfect for the
part of a strong-willed woman leading a double life. Deneuve's
suitability for the part of Marion is borne out by the skill with which
she manages to portray two distinct personas in the same character
(living with a split identity being the central theme of the
film). Outwardly, the actress shows us someone who is entirely in
control, dispassionate and certain in her beliefs. Yet,
beneath the surface, we can readily discern the other Marion:
emotionally confused, passionate and genuinely
afraid.
For the male lead, Truffaut opted for Gérard Depardieu, a rising
young actor who had distinguished himself in Bertrand Blier's
Les
Valseuses (1974) and
Préparez vos mouchoirs
(1978). Depardieu initially had great reservations about working
with a director who, in his view, appeared to be only concerned with
bourgeois themes. As it turned out, Depardieu and Truffaut
quickly established a warm friendship and mutual respect, and they
would work together on the director's next film,
La
Femme d'à coté (1981). This was
to have been followed by many other collaborations, but Truffaut's
death put paid to these.
In one of French cinema's most celebrated screen partnerships,
Depardieu and Deneuve complement one another perfectly.
What both actors have in common is a striking incongruity between the
natural persona and the outward appearance. Depardieu's solid
physical presence is belied by a sensitive personality and gentleness
that make him appear tragically vulnerable. Similarly, Deneuve's
ethereal fairytale princess bearing is contradicted by an almost
masculine self-assurance and toughness. Whilst Depardieu
and Deneuve are both fine actors in their own right, something magical
happens when they share the same spotlight. Their subtly magnetic
on-screen rapport suggests not the usual collision of romantic impulses
but rather the subtle crisscrossing of ripples on a placid lake, an
interaction that is profound, poetic and inordinately complex.
The two actors would subsequently appear together in Claude Berri's
Je
vous aime (1980), Alain Corneau's
Le Choix des armes (1981) and
Fort
Saganne (1984) and André Téchiné
Les Temps qui changent (2004).
As ever, Truffaut showed impeccable judgement in his allocation of the
supporting roles. The part of the stand-in director went to Jean
Poiret, who was at the time known for his camp comedic roles, usually
opposite Michel Serrault. For the part of the Jewish playwright,
Truffaut chose the celebrated German actor Heinz Bennet, who had
previously starred in Ingmar Bergman's
The Serpent's Egg (1977) and
Volker Schlöndorff
The Tin Drum (1979). The
go-getting actress Nadine was played by Sabine Haudepin who, aged six,
had debuted in Truffaut's
Jules et Jim (1962). In
one of his earliest film appearances, Richard Bohringer is cast as a
decidedly nasty Gestapo officer. And playing the lesbian actress
Arlette is Andréa Ferréol, who had been noted for her
performance in Marco Ferreri's
La Grande bouffe (1973).
Although Truffaut had some serious concerns about
Le Dernier métro (he was
particularly anxious over how the public would react to a film about
the Occupation), it proved to be a runaway success, a box office hit
both in France and abroad. In France alone it attracted an
audience of over three million on its first release, a welcome success
for Truffaut after the commercial failure of
La
Chambre verte (1978) and the lukewarm reception of
L'Amour
en fuite (1979). Critical reaction was also generally
positive. The film virtually swept the board at the 1981
Césars, winning ten awards out of twelve nominations. As
well as scooping all the awards in the main categories of Best Film,
Best Director, Best Actor (Depardieu) and Best Actress (Deneuve), it
won six awards in the minor categories: for Best Screenplay, Best
Music, Best Sound, Best Editing, Best Set Design and Best
Cinematography.
Le Dernier
métro was Truffaut's last great success, although some
commentators saw this as proof that the director had sold out to
commercial cinema and no longer merited his
auteur status. Some lamented
the fact that Truffaut's triumph completely eclipsed some more worthy
cinematic contributions that year, such as Maurice Pialat's
Loulou,
Alain Resnais'
Mon oncle d'Amérique,
Claude Sautet's
Un Mauvais fils
and Jean-Luc Godard's
Sauve qui peut (la vie).
With its ochre-tinted palette, intense performances and confined
setting,
Le Dernier métro
offers one of cinema's most potent evocations of France's period of
Nazi Occupation. The split identity of a nation living under an
occupying power is reflected in the dual nature of each of the
protagonists, who, like all French people of the time, are compelled to
make compromises in order to survive. Just as Marion is unable to choose
between the husband she has sworn to protect and the
charismatic young actor she is irresistibly drawn to, so Bernard is torn
between his passion for the theatre and his
desire to devote himself to resistance activity. Many of the
secondary characters are in the same predicament, having to present one
face to the world whilst carefully guarding their true nature. No
character appears strong enough to live up to his ideals, to commit to
his true passion and see it through, come what may. Instead,
they all pursue a fractured double life, living not in the sunshine of
desire but beneath a dark cloud of ambivalence, like the majority of
French people of this period. There may be tears beneath the
greasepaint, but the show must go
on.
© James Travers 2010
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Next François Truffaut film:
La Femme d'à côté (1981)