Film Review
A decade after he made his directing debut with a comedy short,
Les Affaires publiques (1934),
Robert Bresson completed his first full-length film which, whilst
stylistically very different to the films he would subsequently make,
resonates with many of the themes that are central to his oeuvre, in
particular man's striving for spiritual fulfilment and
redemption.
Les Anges du
péché is a characteristically Bressonian
exploration of the nature of sin and the susceptibility of the human
spirit to evil, but it differs markedly from the director's later films
in that it adopts a conventional approach to filmmaking, with
professional actors giving polished performances in the style of the
day (more theatrical than naturalistic). Bresson would stick to
the cinematic conventions of his time for one further film,
Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne
(1945), before breaking ranks and developing his own form
of cinematic expression.
Les Anges du péché
has much in common with Bresson's later masterpieces
Journal d'un curé de campagne
(1951) and
Procès de Jeanne d'Arc
(1962), and indeed these three films may legitimately be grouped
together as a loose trilogy in which the director expounds his
idiosyncratic ideas about faith and redemption. The heroine of
the first film, Anne-Marie (magnificently portrayed by Renée
Faure), resembles the tragic protagonists of the other two - a young
country priest who fails to deliver Christ's message to sceptical
parishioners and Joan of Arc, who fails to convince a court of her
divine inspiration. Like the characters in these later Bresson
films, Anne-Marie ends up being ostracised from the community she has
selflessly devoted herself to but she is ultimately redeemed by the
immense purity of her faith.
Anne-Marie's salvation is mirrored by that of the 'fallen woman'
Thérèse (Jany Holt), who resists well-meaning attempts to
reform her but in the end is redeemed in a miraculous moment of
transcendence. The antagonistic and manipulative killer
Thérèse prefigures those deeply flawed characters in
Bresson's later films -
Pickpocket (1959),
Le Diable probablement (1977)
and
L'Argent
(1983) - who at first appear seem to be completely beyond salvation but
ultimately find their way back to goodness. The fact that
Anne-Marie and Thérèse end up in the same place, in spite
of the fact that one is an obvious saint and the other an outright
sinner, is a typically Bressonesque comment that there are no absolutes
in good or evil and that we are all capable of redemption and all
equally deserving of forgiveness. To those familiar with
Bresson's work, the language of
Les
Anges du péché may be unfamiliar but the meaning
is instantly recognisable.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Robert Bresson film:
Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne (1945)
Film Synopsis
Rather than follow the life of wealth and comfort that has been mapped out
for her by her family circumstances, Anne-Marie Lamaury opts instead to take
holy orders and devote herself to the service of God. The order she
chooses is the Dominicaines de Béthanie, which concerns itself with
the rehabilitation of women convicts. It is on one of her prison visits
that Anne-Marie meets Thérèse and finds herself strangely concerned
with her plight. The prisoner gives the nun no encouragement and is
clearly too resentful for what has happened to her to accept any help from
anyone. Undeterred by the young woman's intransigence and hostility,
Anne-Marie persists and offers her a place to stay in the convent when she
comes out of prison.
Thérèse declines and goes on insisting that she has been wrongly
convicted. Not long afterwards, Thérèse turns up at the
convent and appeals to Anne-Marie to help her. It seems that, shortly
after leaving prison, the unrepentant young woman returned to her lover,
the man she claimed committed the theft for which she was convicted, and
murdered him. Anne-Marie is naturally delighted by Thérèse's
arrival and, convinced she has found a genuine penitent, devotes herself
to the young woman's spiritual salvation. In doing so, this most committed
of nuns comes into conflict with her fellow sisters and ends up being sent
away from the convent.
A short time later, Anne-Marie is found lying unconscious on the grave of
the order's founder. The Mother Superior takes pity on her and welcomes
the grievously ill woman back into the convent, where she is dutifully nursed
by Thérèse. Fearing that the dying Anne-Marie will betray
her confidence, Thérèse makes up her mind to run away once
again, but before she can do so the police arrive to arrest her. Once
she has completed her prison sentence, she returns to the convent to replace
the one to whom she owes her redemption - Anne-Marie.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.