Film Review
Les Deux Anglaises was the
film of which its director, François Truffaut, was most proud,
but it has taken many years for it to become accepted as one of his
seminal films. In typical Truffaut fashion, it is a film which
sensitively explores the cruel workings of an amour fou and can be read
as a personal rejection of the new era of permissiveness for which the
director had little affinity. The film is adapted from the second
novel by Henri-Pierre Roché, whose first novel,
Jules
et Jim, had previously been made into a film by Truffaut (to
almost universal acclaim) in the early 1960s.
The film's gestation coincided with the bleakest period in Truffaut's
life, when, following the end of his two-year-long affair with
Catherine Deneuve, he succumbed to a crippling bout of
depression. Just over a year before his breakdown and subsequent
admission to a psychiatric clinic in January 1971, Truffaut had fallen
in love with Roché's second novel and invited his trusty
screenwriter Jean Gruault to develop a screen treatment. Working
from Roché's novel, Truffaut's detailed annotations and the
writer's extensive memoirs (which were later published after his
death), Gruault came up with a 500 page script which immediately cooled
Truffaut's interest in the project. It was only after rereading
Roché's novel during his period of convalescence that Truffaut
felt up to the job of making it into a film, once Gruault had
subjected his voluminous script to an aggressive haircut.
It is not hard to see why Roché's autobiographical novel had so
much appeal to Truffaut. Although it is set in another era (the
first decade of the 20th century), the novel deals with themes that
were central to Truffaut's oeuvre - the destructive power of frustrated
desire, the conflict between friendship and romantic love and, most
crucially, the impossibility of ever having one's emotional needs
satisfied. Like Truffaut, Roché combines old-fashioned
romanticism with a surprisingly modern approach to sex, and has no time
for trite sentimentality and lurid sensationalism. In many ways,
Les Deux Anglaises et le continent
is the antithesis of
Jules et Jim
- not only does it invert the male-female roles but it focuses far more
on the pains of love and is less preoccupied with its fleeting
pleasures.
Before making
Jules et Jim, Truffaut became very close to
Roché and came to regard him both as a spiritual father and a
writer of comparable talent to Jean Cocteau. It was Truffaut's
admiration for Roché (who was 77 when he wrote his second book)
which led him to adopt a literary style for the film, in a conscious
attempt to capture the essence of the writer's novel - hence the
extensive use of voiceover narration (read by the director himself) and
face-to-camera soliloquies. Truffaut not only manages to
imbue his film with Roché's distinctive narrative voice, he also
conveys, far more convincingly than most dramas set in this period, the
torture of having to repress one's most primitive feelings in age of
puritanical self-restraint.
As Truffaut once remarked, this is not a film about physical love, it
is a physical film about love. It is a film that shows the
destructive power of repressed emotions and how love, if thwarted or
manipulated, can become twisted and poisonous. The connection
with the works of the Brontë sisters is one that is easily made,
and not surprisingly as the film was partly inspired by
The Infernal World of Branwell Brontë,
Daphne du Maurier's biography of the Brontë sisters'
brother. In the film's two heroines, Anne and Muriel Brown,
it is not too hard to see a strong Brontë influence. Like
Charlotte Brontë, Muriel ends up teaching schoolgirls in Brussels,
and Anne shares the same fate as Emily Brontë, dying before her
time after refusing to see a doctor. Anne's last words ("My
mouth is full of Earth...") are those uttered by Emily. The Brown
household looks suspiciously like one that may heve been inhabited by
the Brontë sisters, and Anne and Muriel appear to take turns
impersonating the various main female characters from the Brontë
novels.
For the film's male lead (Claude Roc, modelled on Roché
himself), Truffaut had only one actor in mind: his friend and
protégé Jean-Pierre Léaud.
Léaud had previously appeared in three of Truffaut's films (and
one short), playing the director's alter ego Antoine Doinel, and had
become one of the most recognisable faces of the French New
Wave.
Les Deux Anglaises
et le continent gave Léaud his first serious dramatic
role, and one which he tackled with a surprising maturity and intensity
(exceeding even Tuffaut's expectations). The parts of the two
main female protagonists went to the comparatively unknown Kika Markham
and Stacey Tendeter, two young English actresses who perfectly embodied
the contrasting natures of Anne and Muriel, the former passionate and
liberated, the other crippled by her emotional restraint.
Léaud's insecurity as an actor shows throughout the film, but
this beautifully serves to underscore his character's lack of moral
certainty whilst emphasising the strength of the two women who are
vying for his love.
Although a substantial part of Roché's novel takes place in
Wales, Truffaut was unwilling to risk another problematic location
shoot so soon after his hair-raising experiences with
Fahrenheit
451 (1966). Instead, he opted to film the Welsh
sequences at a private estate on the Cotentin Peninsula in
Normandy. The rugged stretch of French coastline is not only a
perfect substitute for North Wales, providing the film with the most
picturesque backdrop, it also succinctly hints at the raw passions that
are lurking beneath the surface, the natural forces waiting to be
unleashed. The sequences involving the old steam trains were
filmed in the Cévennes and additional scenes were shot in Paris,
including the Boulevard du Montparnasse and the Rodin Museum. With
such a collection of stunning locations, cinematographer Nestor
Almendros could hardly fail to make this one of Truffaut's most
visually alluring films, but it is Almendros' filming of the
interiors that is perhaps more interesting, the confined, overdressed
sets providing a stifling sense of oppression and order that completely
belies the chaotic inner turmoil of the three protagonists.
Georges Delerue's evocative score (easily one of the composer's best),
has a similar effect, a hauntingly placid romantic melody that very
subtly, almost subliminally, makes us aware of the smouldering passions
that must, sooner or later, burn their way through the staid tapestry
of bourgeois respectability and erupt into a blazing inferno.
As is the case with many of Truffaut's films,
Les Deux Anglaises et le continent
is overlaid with numerous auto-biographical references which are
not too difficult to spot. The most obvious point of connection
with Truffaut's own life is the sequence in which the male protagonist
(Claude) succeeds in exorcising his personal demons by writing up his
traumatic emotional experiences as a novel (
Jérôme et Julien).
In a similar way, Truffaut was able to overcome his depression by
making a film that allowed him to transfer his feelings of angst and
abandonment to his fictional creations. Truffaut was so proud of
the end result that he had no reservations about claiming it as his
masterpiece, an opinion that his close friends shared when he screened
it to them. Unfortunately, the critics of the time were of a
different view and the film met with a torrent of bad reviews.
Much of the criticism appeared to be fuelled by a puritanical revulsion for some of
the more shocking sequences in the film - references to female
masturbation, childhood lesbianism and the blood-staining of bed sheets
following a virgin's deflowering - although others judged the film to
be dated and too literary, a cinematic anachronism. This critical
onslaught doubtless contributed to the film's abysmal performance at
the box office. Whenever the film was screened, audiences (that
had no doubt grown used to watching actors ripping off their clothes at
the drop of a beret) sniggered in disgust at the coy love scenes.
Unable to comprehend why the film was struggling to find an audience,
Truffaut hastily withdrew it and made twenty minutes' worth of cuts,
but this did nothing to assuage the critics or prevent the film from
being a commercial disaster. In 1984, shortly before his death,
Truffaut re-edited the film, restoring the excised scenes. When
it was subsequently released in 1985 under the title
Les Deux Anglaises, the film met
with a far more favourable reaction and it has since grown in stature,
so that today it is widely considered to be one of Truffaut's greatest
films, arguably the director's most harrowing and poignant study in
the ravages of repressed desire.
© James Travers 2012
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Next François Truffaut film:
Une belle fille comme moi (1972)
Film Synopsis
Paris, 1899. It is whilst pursuing her studies in sculpture that Anne
Brown, a dark-haired English woman who is not yet 20, falls under the spell
of Claude Roc, a bourgeois French student of her own age. They become
the best of friends and Claude gladly accepts an invitation to stay with
Anne and her family at their house in Wales. Anne is sure that Claude,
whom she dubs 'le Continent', would make the ideal partner for her sister
Muriel, a redhead who leads a more introverted life. Sure enough, encouraged
by Anne, Claude and Muriel soon discover a mutual attraction and decide to
get married.
Before the wedding can take place, however, Muriel's prim and proper mother
insists that the couple should live apart for a full year. If they
still feel strongly about each other at the end of that time, then she will
raise no objection to the marriage. Within six months, Claude's feelings
for Muriel have cooled, so he writes to her letting her know that he can
no longer marry her. Muriel takes this news badly and becomes even
more withdrawn. On her return to Paris, Anne realises that she is in
love with Claude and the two enjoy a brief but happy liaison.
The love affair soon burns itself out and Anne then becomes involved with
another man. The pain of this rejection sends Claude into a mild depression,
which he deals with by writing a novel. Some years later, he meets
up again with Muriel, and they sleep together for the first and last time.
While her sister marries and starts a family, Muriel retreats to London to
devote herself to caring for orphans. Several years pass. One
day, Claude has a chance encounter with a party of English girls. How
odd that one of them should resemble Muriel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.