Film Review
France's ambivalent relationship with North Africa is pointedly
expressed in terms of a Greek tragedy in this hauntingly lyrical film
from André Téchiné, one of his few films to
confront head-on the political realities of his time. The story -
a darkly introspective retelling of
West
Side Story - is engaging but what makes the film so laudable is
the intelligence and delicacy with which it tackles what was (at the
time) a pretty well taboo subject in French cinema: racism.
Les Innocents is one of the most
succinct and socially relevant of Téchiné's films, and it
provides a subtle but effective allegory of France's faltering attempts
to put its colonial past behind it in the protracted aftermath of
Algerian independence.
A dazzling new talent, Sandrine Bonnaire was perfect for the role of
the central heroine Jeanne - the name being an allusion, possibly, to
France's national heroine, Joan of Arc, whom the actress would later
play in the two-part film
Jeanne la Pucelle
(1994)). Jeanne and her younger brother Alain are easily
recognised as the 'innocents' of the film's title, two untainted
children on the threshold of adulthood who are divided by their
opposing allegiances, first to the place where they want to live (the
north and south of France), then to the individuals they are most
strongly attracted to (Stéphane and Saïd). The
dichotomy turns out to be not so black-and-white as it first seems, and
even before Stéphane's racist crimes are exposed Jeanne is
already on the way to falling in love with Saïd. It is at
this point that the real 'innocents' are revealed to us -
Stéphane and Saïd, the bitterest of enemies in life, united
in an ignominious death, just two more victims of the incessant blood
feud that has plagued humanity since the year dot. Memories of
the Algerian War flood over us as we take in the film's final
devastating shot and we are compelled to ask ourselves: why?
Whilst André Téchiné deserves praise, both for his
writing and direction, these are quite modest achievements compared
with the area in which
Les
Innocents truly excels - the quality of the performances from
its exemplary principal cast. Sandrine Bonnaire's talents had
previously been in evidence in Maurice Pialat's
À
nos amours (1983) and Agnès Varda's
Sans
toit ni loi (1985) but here she emerges as a fully fledged
actress, with a striking Jean Seberg haircut that accentuates her
fragility and vitality to heart-breaking proportions. Bonnaire's
vulnerability is mirrored by her co-star Simon de La Brosse, heroically
convincing as a rudderless post-adolescent trying (and failing) to
resist the comforting allure of the grave. Despite his immense
sensitivity as an actor and striking good looks, Simon de La Brosse
never achieved the national and international stardom he merited but he
was a favourite with auteur filmmakers - Éric Rohmer (
Pauline à la plage),
Jacques Doillon (
La Vie de famille)
and Claude Miller (
La Petite Voleuse). His
promising career was cut short in 1998 when he committed suicide at the
age of 32 - a parting that was an inestimable loss to French cinema.
Equally worthy of praise is Jean-Claude Brialy's blisteringly authentic
portrayal of an alcoholic conductor whose passions threaten to drive
him to distraction - it was for this performance that the actor won his
one and only César (for Best Supporting Actor). And,
completing a remarkable quartet, is a charismatic young actor named
Abdellatif Kechiche, who would, many years later, come to prominence as
a world-renowned director with such films as
L'Esquive (2003) and
La Graine et le mulet
(2007). André Téchiné was always fortunate
with his choice of cast and for
Les
Innocents he was four-times blessed. The film is somewhat
overshadowed by the director's subsequent great works but it deserves
never to be overlooked, one of his most eloquent and pertinent
expressions of the tragedy of the human condition.
© James Travers 2014
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Next André Téchiné film:
J'embrasse pas (1991)
Film Synopsis
Jeanne, a young woman from the north of France, travels to the
Mediterranean sea town of Toulon to attend the wedding of her older
sister to a North African man. She uses the visit as an excuse to
patch things up with her dumb younger bother Alain, hoping that he will
accompany her back to her home town in the North. Alain has no
intention of leaving Toulon and runs away to seek the protection of his
closest friend, Saïd, a French Algerian. In her attempt to
find Alain, Jeanne meets Stéphane, the son of a bisexual,
alcoholic conductor, Klotz.
Stéphane has recently come out of a coma and lives under the
tyranny of his over-possessive mother Myrian whilst his father
pursues a destructive liaison with Saïd. As she begins a
love affair with Stéphane, Jeanne finds she is also drawn to
Saïd, unaware that there is a secret connection between the two
young men...
© James Travers
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