Film Review
André Téchiné directs this intensely sombre portrait of the famous
Brontë sisters with a love of his subject and an acute artistic vision. The
film's heavy, repressive mood evokes the harshness and injustice of the life that
the Brontë sisters endured. The passion and colour that is so vivid in their
novels was absent from their daily existence, and the film's appropriately gloomy
cinematography - which uses dreary earth colours to emphasise the cold, remote feel
- brings this home with great poignancy.
The film's main asset is its extraordinary cast. What a casting coup
to put Isabelle Adjani, Marie-France Pisier and Isabelle Huppert in the shoes of the Brontë
sisters - three, by now, near-legendary actresses playing three of the most important
figures in English literature. Each gives a superlative performance; each strengthens
the bleak mood of the piece; each portrays a soul of incalculable fragility and insight.
No, it is impossible to imagine this film without three such magnificent actresses.
For the part of the Brontë's brother, Branwell, Téchiné cast
the then comparatively unknown actor Pascal Greggory. In this role, possibly the
most complex and interesting figure of the film (partly because so little is known about
the character), Greggory excels, giving a hauntingly introspective performance which provides
a dark focus for the narrative. Branwell's love interest is played by the
wonderful Hélène Surgère, a renowned character actress whose performances
are characterised by great inner force and emotional depth.
Téchiné
originally intended to make the film earlier than he did. In 1974, he wrote a script
with Marilyn Goldin on the life of the Brontë sisters, but this was abandoned.
Having completed his 1976 film
Barocco, Téchiné
returned to the subject and developed a revised script with Pascal Bonitzer, a critic
on the
Cahiers du cinema.
© James Travers 2004
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Next André Téchiné film:
Hôtel des Amériques (1981)
Film Synopsis
After the death of his wife, the pastor Patrick Brontë lives in the
small village of Haworth in West Yorkshire, England, with his three daughters
- Charlotte, Emily and Anne - and his one son Branwell. The family
leads a simple life and from an early age each of the children shows a talent
for creative writing. They continue their artistic pursuits in their
spare time when they have each found work, as governesses or private tutors.
Branwell is the first of the siblings to gain recognition from other writers,
following the publication of his poems. Then each of his sisters begin
their own literary careers, with their first novels going into print in quick
succession.
Just when the Brontë clan appears set for fame and fortune disaster
strikes. Branwell has lost his heart to a woman who is fifteen years
his senior, Lydia Robinson. When she declines to marry him, the young
man succumbs to a crushing depression fuelled by drink and drugs. Branwell's
death at the age of 31 is soon followed by that of Emily, struck down by
tuberculosis. The following year, Anne dies from the same disease,
and only Charlotte is left, consoling herself with her growing literary success.
Of the Brontë sisters, she is the only one to find true happiness, by
marrying the man she has always loved, her father's curate Arthur Nicholls...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.