Film Review
In later years, director Robert Bresson was very dismissive of his
first two films,
Les Anges du péché (1943)
and
Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne, although both were crucial stepping
stones in the development of his technique and laid the foundations on
which he was able to create his subsequent auteur
masterpieces.
In terms of both its subject and its
cinematographic style,
Les Dames du
Bois de Boulogne is the most conventional of all Bresson's
films, a straightforward revenge melodrama lifted wholesale from Didier
Diderot's great 18th century novel
Jacques
le fataliste. The dialogue was supplied by Jean Cocteau,
immediately before directing his first feature (and arguably his
finest),
La Belle et la bête
(1946).
Bresson's personal misgivings notwithstanding,
Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne is a
pretty flawless production if one considers only its technical
merits. The film's failings, such as they are, are confined
almost entirely to the contrived plot and wafer-thin
characterisation. Bresson's dissatisfaction with the film was
almost entirely down to his lack of input on the writing side; if he
had had the level of control that he would have on his later films, the
characters would doubtless have been better developed and the film
would have been a far more complex and interesting study in the nature
of revenge. As it was, the film was critically well-received on
its initial release and would have a considerable influence on some of
the future directors of the French New Wave, in particular
François Truffaut.
Bresson may not have succeeded on the writing front but he shows great
ingenuity in his mise-en-scène, creating a stifling sense of
oppression and entrapment which serves the narrative admirably.
The impression is that Helène, the main protagonist, sits at the
centre of a web like a hungry spider, a web into which her victims
haplessly tumble and from which they cannot escape. This becomes
particularly evident in the film's final sequences, where Helène
exerts an almost supernatural hold over her former lover Jean,
effortlessly drawing him towards the abyss as she savours her moment of
triumph. The harsh monochrome lighting, redolent of classic film
noir with its threatening use of shadows, accentuates Helène's
apparent power whilst reminding us that she now belongs to the
darkness, poisoned and transformed into a thing of pure evil by the
love that once burned in her heart. Cinematographer Philippe
Agostini was a master at bringing an aura of oppression and doom to the
films he worked on and would achieve similar results on many notable
French films, including Marcel Carné's
Les Portes de la nuit (1946)
and Jules Dassin's landmark of French film noir,
Du rififi chez les hommes
(1955).
Perfectly cast in the leading role, that of the vindictive
Hélène, is the magnificent Maria Casares. An
acclaimed stage actress, Casares had just triumphed in her first screen
role in Marcel Carné's
Les Enfants du paradis
(1945). With her magnetic personality and penchant for playing
cool villainy, Casares exudes venom from just about every pore and
creates one of French cinema's great female monsters in the calculating
Hélène. Yet just as Hélène has
inestimable powers of seduction over both sexes, so Casares wins her
audience over to her side with consummate ease. We may disapprove of her character's
conduct, yet her motivation, the desire to repay an unkind blow, is one
we can easily engage with, and inwardly we cheer her on as she spins
her web of deceit and lures her faithless victim to his worthy
downfall. Of course she is bound to fail, for, as we all know,
love will always triumph over evil in the end. It is not the
victory of sweet revenge that Hélène wins for herself,
but a passport to endless night - such is the fate of all those who
cannot forgive and close their hearts to mercy. How fitting that
Casares' next great role should be that of Death herself, in Jean
Cocteau's
Orphée (1949).
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Robert Bresson film:
Journal d'un curé de campagne (1951)
Film Synopsis
Having tricked her lover Jean into admitting that he no longer loves
her, society lady Helène is inwardly consumed by anger and plots
a cruel vengeance. She contrives for Jean to meet and fall in
love with an impoverished cabaret dancer, Agnès, a woman who,
unbeknown to Jean, has a reputation as a prostitute. Weary of the
male sex, Agnès lives in seclusion with her mother near the Bois
du Bologne in Paris, in an apartment provided by Helène.
It is in the park that Agnès and Jean meet, and for Jean it is love
at first sight. Although she initially spurns Jean's advances,
Agnès gradually warms to him and the couple decide to
marry. After the wedding, Helène claims a terrible victory
by revealing Agnès' unsavoury past to Jean...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.