Film Review
In the landscape of post-war French cinema Jacqueline Audry was that
rarest of creatures, a woman film director. A decade before the
French New Wave, she was blazing a trail as an independently minded
film auteur, courting controversy with her female-oriented works which
include a daring portrayal of a lesbian love affair between a school
girl and her headmistress (
Olivia,
1951). It was Audry who gave us the first screen adaptation of
Colette's novel
Gigi, nine
years before the glitzier Hollywood musical version, as well as several
other adaptations of famous literary works. Underrated and
overlooked in her own lifetime, Audry is virtually forgotten today, but
whilst she may not have been the most inspired of filmmakers the fact
that she managed to make her mark in a male-dominated industry earns
her a place in the pantheon of French film directors.
Les Petits matins (a.k.a.
Mademoiselle Stop) is one of
Audry's lesser works, a lightweight comedy structured as a road movie
in which a totally unknown actress (Agathe Aems, a professional model)
encounters a seemingly interminable string of famous French film actors
as she travels from Belgium to the French Rivera. The film would
be totally without interest were it not for the incredible mass of
talent that Audry somehow managed to shoehorn into it, with the great
French chansonnier Charles Aznavour providing the gorgeously evocative
theme song 'Les petits matins', which is probably the best thing about
the whole crazy concoction.
Right from the outset the heroine (Aems) succeeds in alienating herself
from the audience, overplaying the role of the independent modern young
miss who uses all of her feminine guiles to deceive, exploit and
humiliate every man who dares to cross her path with lascivious
intent. Admittedly, most of these men - middle-aged lechers who
range from the pathetic (Bernard Blier, François Périer)
to the downright creepy (Darry Cowl, Robert Hossein) - deserve what
they get, but some (Gilbert Bécaud, Noël-Noël),
manage to steal our sympathies and we end up despising the heroine even
more. Castration is never a pretty sight.
It is hard to know what Audry's intention was - to support or lampoon
cinema's portrayal of female emancipation - but whatever her intention
the film can still be enjoyed as a good-natured comedy which is
refreshingly untainted by the pretensions of the Nouvelle Vague.
No other French film offers such an impressive roll-call of talent -
the opening credits read like a comprehensive
Who's Who of French cinema -
and for this reason alone the film has stood the test of time.
Where else can you hope to encounter a gathering of stars of the
calibre of Arletty, Lino Ventura, Daniel Gélin, Pierre Brasseur,
Claude Rich and Jean-Claude Brialy, all happily taking the Mickey out
of themselves for our amusement?
Les Petits matins is far from being
a
grand classique but it is a
pleasing nostalgia piece that evokes the mood of its time (the early
1960s) with effortless élan.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2013
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Film Synopsis
Agathe, a young Belgian secretary, is looking forward to her two weeks'
holiday by the sea, but when the Belgian weather turns bad she takes
the advice of a total stranger and heads off for the Côte d'Azur,
hoping that at her journey's end she will meet her Prince
Charming. Unfortunately, her adventure will be very different
from what she had imagined and she will learn that people do not always
act through the best intentions. She graciously accepts a dinner
invitation from an older man at a posh restaurant but makes a hasty
retreat when she realises what he has planned in the way of after
dinner entertainment. Next, she falls for a handsome
airline pilot. He offers to take her to Nice, but it is obvious
that the price of her ticket will be more than she is willing to
pay. So, it's back to the open road, and Agathe is still
confident that, in spite of everything, love and happiness await her on
the Riviera...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.