Film Review
François Villiers, brother of the actor Jean-Pierre Aumont, is
an all but forgotten but once highly appreciated filmmaker who made a
series of uneven pictures such as
Hans
le marin (1949),
L'Eau vive
(1958),
La Verte moisson
(1959),
Pierrot la tendresse
(1960),
Constance aux enfers
(1963) and
L'Autre femme
(1964). His Franco-Italian drama
Le Puits aux trois verités
had its premiere on 13th October 1961. Via a fraught
mother-daughter-husband relationship and a suspicious death, the viewer
is manoeuvred through a well-rounded script containing several
flashbacks and scattered parcels of truths about events that took place
before the victim's death. Strangely enough, the truth takes the
form of three plausible versions when told by the mother, the husband
and even the victim. François Villiers invites everyone to
arrive at his own version of the truth and the effort of doing so
brings its rewards. It is inventive filmmaking with some
delicious dialogue from the master Henri Jeanson.
Perhaps there are a few minor weaknesses which slow things down a
little, and the conclusion was certainly intended to be cynical.
When choosing his two lead actors it appears that Villiers was anxious
not to be left behind by the New wave, but by tackling a real story he
could do so without losing an older audience. Between
Fortunat
and
Les Lions sont lachés,
Michèle Morgan, one of France's leading ladies, lent her name
and talent to the role of Renée, the ambiguous mother in this
independent production, an experience she will repeat in films such as
Rencontres,
Les Yeux cernés, and
Les pas perdus. Jean-Claude
Brialy is in full bloom as Laurent, the cynical, tender and unhappy
hero. Catherine Spaak (daughter of scriptwriter Charles Spaak and
niece of the former Belgian prime minister Paul-Henri Spaak, remembered
for her part in Henri Verneuil's
Week-end
à Zuydcoote) is convincing as the weak daughter
Danielle. The co-stars include such familiar faces as Michel
Etcheverry, the Italian beauty Scilla Gabel and the Latin lover Franco
Fabrizi. The truth of the matter is that
Le puits aux trois verités
found an audience of over 1.5 million.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
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Film Synopsis
Midnight in Paris, Faubourg St Honoré. In one house, a
woman suddenly screams and the sound of a gunshot is heard. A
short time later, Laurent Lénaud, a young painter, is running away with
a suitcase. Arriving at a hotel, he enters a room where a young
woman named Rossana is crying. The room is strewn with broken
furniture and clothes lie on the floor. Laurent is almost certain
that his wife Danielle is to blame for this. Meanwhile, in an
expensive apartment a woman is responding to the questions put to her
by police officer Bertrand. She is Renée Plèges,
the owner of an antiques shop. That evening, she found her
daughter Danielle shot dead. Renée explains that Laurent,
her son-in-law, wanted to leave Danielle. When she refused to
divorce him, he killed her. While Bertrand asks Renée to
tell him everything she remembers since the first day she met Laurent,
the latter recounts to his mistress Rossana the events that took place
before Danielle's death. Two completely different stories
emerge. Then Danielle's personal diary is found, bringing a third
explanation of what took place that evening...
© James Travers
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