Film Review
Le Libertin is a daring attempt to combine the lavish historical drama (for which
French cinema is particularly renowned) with bawdy farce - a film which would almost certainly
have ended up with the title “Carry On Diderot” if it had been made in England.
Whilst the film is, overall, entertaining and includes some hilarious set pieces (the
'pig organ' being perhaps the best and sickest example), not all of the jokes work and
there is a sense that too much is being crammed into too small a space - rather like Baroness
Holbach's endless, anachronistic binging on chocolate, caviar and popcorn.
The film was directed by Gabriel Aghion, who
won both fame and notoriety with
Pédale douce, a comedy which, as in his
subsequent films, made light of matters sexual. For
Le Libertin, Aghion's
most extravagant film to date, the director was inspired by a stage play by Eric-Emmanuel
Schmitt, who agreed to adapt his play for the film. With big names such as
Vincent Pérez, Fanny Ardant and Josiane Balasko heading a star-studded cast, the
film should have been a run-away success. Unfortunately - despite some great comic
performances (Balasko is deliriously funny in her role), the film did not impress the
critics greatly and it failed to be the huge commercial success its producers were probably
expecting.
© James Travers 2004
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Next Gabriel Aghion film:
Absolument fabuleux (2001)
Film Synopsis
France, in the mid-1700s. Denis Diderot, arguably the greatest philosopher
of his age, is labouring on what will be his undoubted masterpiece,
The
Encyclopaedia. In later years, this will be hailed as his greatest
achievement, but in his own unenlightened times, he has many enemies - notably
the Church - who are determined to thwart him and destroy his work.
Baron Holbach, one of France's more enlightened aristocrats, comes to Diderot's
aid, offering him a place in his château where he can not only continue
writing his magnum opus, but also begin printing it in secret.
The philosopher is struggling to come up with a succinct definition of the
word 'morality' when the nymphomaniac woman artist Madame Therbouche asks
him if he will pose naked for her next painting. Naturally, always
one to oblige a good-looking lady, he gives his consent. Madame Therbouche
is a canny temptress and it is with consummate ease that she wheedles out
of Diderot the location of his printing press - it is hidden in the baron's
chapel. The noise of the press is completely masked by the playing
of the chapel organ.
Diderot's work is threatened by the sudden arrival of Holbach's puritanical
brother, a prim and proper cardinal who is easily shocked by the exhibitions
of licentious behaviour he sees all around him in the baron's grounds.
The sight of Diderot standing stark naked in the garden doesn't exactly improve
his estimation of the supposed man of letters. The philosopher has
other worries to contend with. His wife has had enough of his philandering
and plans to run off with his daughter, Angélique. The latter
gives the philosopher further cause for concern when she confides in him
that she wants to have a child but has no desire to marry...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.