Film Review
Le Beau Serge (1958) marked
the beginning not only of Claude Chabrol's long and illustrious filmmaking
career, but also of the French New Wave, the movement that would re-energise
French cinema in the late 1950s, early '60s, whilst popularising the notion
of the film auteur. By the time Chabrol released his next film,
Les
Cousins, in March 1959, la Nouvelle Vague was still very much in the
process of gestation and wouldn't make itself felt until François
Truffaut's
Les 400 coups
had burst onto cinema screens in May of that year.
With its familiar Paris setting and predominantly youthful cast, both captured
on film by ace cinematographer Henri Decae in a way that captures the exuberance
of the period,
Les Cousins is far more recognisably New Wave than
Chabrol's debut piece, although it patently lacks the innovative flair and
bravura daring that the director's more talented contemporaries - Jean-Luc
Godard, Jacques Rivette and Truffaut - would casually flaunt in their early
films. Now considered a fairly minor work in Chabrol's massive oeuvre,
Les Cousins was well thought of by the critics of the time and was
a recipient of the Golden Bear award at the Berlin Film Festival in 1959.
Despite their contrasting settings, visual style and overall mood,
Le
Beau Serge and
Les Cousins should be taken together as two halves
of a carefully constructed diptych, one that establishes a key motif of Chabrol's
work - the folly of taking things at face value. The danger of judging
solely by appearances - a common failing of the bourgeois class on which
the director would mercilessly pour scorn throughout his career - provides
the motor for many of Chabrol's films, and it is only by going beyond the
misleading surface impressions that we really see what is going on - the
subtle undercurrents and vague seismic twitches that have the potential to
build, escalate and suddenly unleash death and destruction on our seemingly
stable and ordered world.
What makes Chabrol's first two films particularly interesting is that, crudely
speaking, they are mirror images of each other, each shedding light on the
other. In
Le Beau Serge, a confident city boy (an unusually
sympathetic Jean-Claude Brialy) returns to his backwater home town in the
provinces to come to the aid of a long-lost childhood friend (Gérard
Blain, harrowingly convincing as a dipsomaniac depressive), ruining his health
in the process. In
Les Cousins, a somewhat more oppressive and
cynical affair, the provincial lad (Blain again) comes to Paris to study
law, only to have his dreams totally destroyed by his extravagant self-loving
cousin (Brialy,
naturellement, complete with Fu Manchu facial adornments).
In both films, the wildly contrasting protagonists (the virtuous outsider
and deeply flawed habitué) are set up as rivals who, despite their
supposed longstanding bond of mutual affection, seem impelled to bring down
and ultimately destroy the another. Chabrol and his frequent co-screenwriter
Paul Gegauff do not insult us by guiding our sympathies one way or the other.
The excessively gauche Charles and obsessive poseur Paul are equally objectionable
and it is only through the subtlest of means that the actors portraying them
succeed in making them at all sympathetic. It is what we feel, not
what we see, that makes the film so rich and engaging. Surface impressions
count for very little in the mischievous art of Claude Chabrol.
On the face of it, it would seem that the shared destiny of Paul and Charles
is being guided not by human malevolence, but by kismet, the fickle hand
of fate that manifests itself most visibly in the sequence where the happily
naive Charles walks out of a bookshop clutching a copy of Balzac's
Lost
Illusions, just a few scenes before his process of disillusionment gets
under way. As in a classic film noir, the music, lighting and shot
compositions all lend an aura of encroaching menace to the drama as it nears
its climax, and it is so easy to succumb to the illusion that providence
is behind this ineluctable tragedy of cicumstances. In truth, it is
the two protagonists who are the architects of their misfortune, a subconscious
desire to dispose of the other manifesting itself spectacularly in a despicably
ironic denouement.
The ambiguous nature of the relationship between the two cousins and the
cruelty of their mutual deceit is savagely underscored in the film's closing
moments, the famous love theme from Wagner's
Tristan und Isolde playing
in the background as Paul silently contemplates his bitter victory over Charles.
This is not the outcome that Paul would have wished for but it is the one
he was bound to arrive at, once the canker of male supremacy had taken root
in his soul. With a startling brutality offset by an eerily incongruous
poetry,
Les Cousins introduces a theme that would become recurrent
in Chabrol's work - the violent repulsion of an unwelcome and possibly disruptive
interloper from an exclusively bourgeois milieu.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Chabrol film:
Les Bonnes femmes (1960)
Film Synopsis
Against the wishes of his adoring mother, Charles leaves his home in the
provinces so that he can study law in Paris. Accommodation is provided
by his cousin Paul Thomas, who presently occupies a spacious luxury apartment
in Neuilly-sur-Seine belonging to a wealthy relative. Paul is also
a law student, but he shows little interest in his studies and prefers to
fritter away his time with his party-loving libertine friends. Lacking
his cousin's confidence, loose morals and zest for living, Charles is out
of place in Paul's hedonistic world and is further troubled when he falls
madly in love with one of Paul's many female friends, an attractive young
woman named Florence.
Influenced by one of his less benign friends, Clovis, Paul seduces Florence
to convince her that she has no deep feelings for Charles. The latter
deals with this betrayal by burying himself in his work, knowing that he
will break his mother's heart if he fails his exams. The day before
Charles is due to sit his exams, Paul passes his with flying colours, apparently
without having done any work. Naturally he must celebrate this victory
with a riotous party, overlooking the fact that his cousin is frantically
revising for his own exams. Failure is Charles's reward for his abstinence
and hard work. Returning to Paul's apartment late that night he picks
up his cousin's revolver and, after inserting one bullet into the barrel,
he proceeds to his bedroom. One chance in six. Once again, the
odds are stacked in Paul's favour...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.