Film Review
The fourth movie by film director Jean-Paul Mokiejewski, better known
as Jean-Pierre Mocky, came out on 22 May 1963. Entitled
Les Vierges, it is a Franco-Italian
comedy of manners which explores the relationships of the young
generation in the 1960s. Mocky depicts, with his characteristic dark
humour, five portraits of young girls discovering physical love for the
first time. As the title suggests, it is a paradoxical and also
surprisingly poetic film.
After his delightful farce
Les Snobs
(1961), Jean-Pierre Mocky returned to amorous relationships with this
delicious exploration of the female psyche. It is in some ways a
companion piece to his 1959 film
Les
Drageurs, which covered similar territory, from a male angle.
Les Vierges is more than a film; it
is an interesting and almost surreal presentation of the pro-1968
mentality. Through five situations that are both cruel and tender,
funny and sad, we are reminded of the inequalities that prevailed in
the mid-1960s through simple-minded male chauvinism. The film's
morale is self-evident: how can young men pursue multiple relationships
but expect to find a pure woman for marriage? The era depicted in
the film came to an end in 1967 with the Neuwirth law, which legalized
birth control methods in France for the first time.
The four leading female roles are authentically played by unknown young
actresses carefully chosen by the filmmaker himself. The cast
also includes several familiar faces from Mocky's films (Charles
Aznavour, Gérard Blain, Francis Blanche and Jean Poiret).
Last but not least, there is the radiant Italian actress Stefania
Sandrelli, who was first seen in Pietro Germi's 1961 film
Divorce à l'Italienne with
Marcello Mastroianni. After several successful Italian
productions, Sandrelli was noticed in French movies such as Jean-Pierre
Melville's
L'Ainé des ferchaux
(1963) and
Tendre voyou (1966), both with
Jean-Paul Belmondo, and also Alain Corneau's
Police
python 357 (1976) with Yves Montand. Don't miss this
surprising and exhilarating film, now available on
DVD.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Pierre Mocky film:
Un drôle de paroissien (1963)
Film Synopsis
Five young women from very different backgrounds in the 1960s
experience their first romantic coupling:
Marie Claude flirts with two young men, François and
Rémy, but she gives herself to a total stranger at the
fairground.
Geneviève marries Robert because he shows her great
respect. But when she discovers the nature of physical love on
her honeymoon, she is so disgusted that she resolves to avoid any
physical contact...
Christine is engaged to Xavier, an idiotic nobleman. She
convinces him that, to advance her career, she gave herself to her
employer. In fact, she had spent the night with a painter with
whom she had fallen in love.
Sophie loves and is loved by Mickey, a young plumber. Together,
they look for a place where they can play the games of love, but in
vain...
Nora is in love with her manager, Berthet, a forty year-old married
man. Berthet loves her too but he refuses to consummate his love
until he is divorced. Nora thinks that her virginity is the
problem, so she allows a colleague to lure her into bed. When
Berthet hears about this he decides to leave her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.