Film Review
For any self-respecting admirer of the great French novel
Madame Bovary, Vincente Minnelli
would seem to be an unlikely choice of director for a film adaptation
of Flaubert's literary masterpiece. Everyone associates
Minnelli with frivolous comedies such as
Father of the Bride (1950) and
lavish feel-good musicals like
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944),
An American in Paris (1951) and
Gigi
(1958). There is no place for the sordid realities of life in
Minnelli's cinema, and like the wilfully deluded heroine in Flaubert's
novel, he appears to see the world as an old-fashioned romance, filled
with glamour and perfumed elegance. Yet there is also a darker
side to Minnelli, which can sometimes be glimpsed in even some of his
brightest films. Like Emma Bovary, Vincente Minnelli seemed to
want the world to be a fairytale romance, so there is a natural
affinity between him and the ill-fated serial adulteress, which serves
to make his adaptation of Flaubert's novel the best that cinema has so
far given us, putting to shame other, more realist adaptations by Jean
Renoir and Claude Chabrol, which fail to connect with the heroine in
the way that Minnelli does so effortlessly.
Despite being heavily constrained by Hollywood's stringent censorship
rules, Minnelli and his screenwriter Robert Ardrey craft an intense,
melodramatic version of
Madame Bovary
that is both compelling and surprisingly faithful to the source
novel. The earthy realism of the novel which so scandalised
French society in the 1850s, and led to the famous trial of 1857, is
suppressed and replaced with a typically Minnellian gloss, which
effectively reflects the delusion of the heroine, whose obsession with
beauty leads her to the ugliest of outcomes. The height of Emma's
wished-for fantasy is superbly captured in the film's rightly
celebrated set-piece, a magnificent ball sequence worthy of the great
Max Ophüls in its opulence and the dizzying fluidity of its
camerawork.
In what is arguably her greatest screen role, Jennifer Jones
monopolises our attention as Emma Bovary, compelling us to identify
with a character who could so easily be characterised as an egoistical
nymphomaniac but who impresses us as a tragic victim of circumstances,
a naive soul corrupted and ultimately destroyed by a fundamentally
rotten society. In an oeuvre replete with so many timeless
masterpieces,
Madame Bovary
is so easily overlooked, but it is assuredly one of Vincente Minnelli's
most mature and polished films, although the Flaubert purists will
doubtless feel justified in turning their nose up at it as it doesn't
quite grasp the essential truth that underpins one of the great works
in French literature. But do we really expect any film to do
justice to Flaubert's novel?
© James Travers 2013
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Next Vincente Minnelli film:
Father of the Bride (1950)
Film Synopsis
In 1857, a book is on trial in France, charged with being an affront to
public morality. That book is 'Madame Bovary', and its author
Gustave Flaubert gives an impassioned defence of his work, arguing that
its heroine is not a monster, but a victim of a monstrous
society. To argue his case, Flaubert relates the events in his
novel, which begins with Emma Rouault's marriage to a mediocre country
doctor, Charles Bovary. A devotee of romantic fiction, Emma is
saddened when she discovers the humdrum realities of married life and
seeks escape elsewhere, first through a passionate affair with a
libertine aristocrat, then with a gentle romance with a young lawyer, a
friend of her husband. As she pursues her amorous escapades, Emma
ratchets up a mountain of debts and when she discovers the extent of
what she owes to her creditors she sees there is only one way out of
her terrible predicament...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.