Film Review
It wasn't until he returned to Europe after his time in Hollywood -
where he distinguished himself with such films as
Letter from an Unknown Woman (1948)
and
The Reckless Moment (1949) -
that Max Ophüls fulfilled his creative potential with four of the
most elegantly crafted works in film history. What unifies these
four sublime masterworks -
La Ronde (1950),
Le
Plaisir (1952),
Madame
de... (1953) and
Lola Montès (1955) - is
the way in which their director employs his unique stylistic approach
to deliver the most keenly observed examinations of human
frailty. In each film, Ophüls deftly punctures the balloon
of superficiality which envelops his protagonists and delights in
showing us the complex inner world that lies beneath the theatrical
pretence and sugary artifice. By subtly subverting the
conventions to which he appears to be intimately wedded, Ophüls
reveals a tendency that today might be labelled post-modern, although
more seasoned admirers of his work will be wary about applying such
glib statements. The fact is that the films of Max Ophüls are
riven with textual and thematic complexity, making it hard, indeed
futile, to characterise them in simple terms.
Ophüls' background was in the theatre; before he became a film
director he staged over two hundred plays and operettas in Germany,
Switzerland and Austria. It is therefore hardly surprising that
his films should have a striking theatricality. The sets are
often grand and lavishly decorated, the camera movements are elaborate
and expressive, the lighting fine-tuned to maximise the beauty and
harmony of each shot. With sublime visual artistry,
Ophüls invariably imbues each of his French films with a grace and
refinement that is unmatched by any another filmmaker. Yet such
intoxicating elegance does not deceive us for long. Having woven
a tapestry of the finest quality, Ophüls slowly rips it apart and
shows us the reality that is underneath it. To borrow a phrase
from
Madame de..., Ophüls'
films are only superficially superficial. Beneath the alluring
surface gloss there lies the truth - stark, ugly and terrifying.
Madame de... is unquestionably
Max Ophüls' greatest achievement. It is not only his most
perfectly composed film, it is also his most astute exploration of the
human psyche, as well as his most scathing attack on high
society. It plunges us into a world, that of the 19th Century aristocracy,
that superficially resembles a fairytale. Its characters are
torn between the demands of social etiquette and their natural instincts, incapable
of yielding fully to their passions and therefore destined to lose
everything in a maelstrom of frustrated desires. It is evident
from the opening sequence that the heroine no longer loves her husband,
but so attached is she to the sham world of wealth and privilege that
she cannot end the stale union and look for happiness elsewhere.
When such happiness does, by chance, come knocking on her door, in the
guise of a handsome Italian diplomat, she is unable to embrace it fully
and merely allows the romance to be extinguished by her overbearing
husband. The earrings which appear to propel the narrative like a
cursed talisman symbolise the power relationship between the male and
female characters. The heroine's mistaken belief that the jewels
are hers and can buy her some independence is tragically reversed at
the end of the film when their true purpose is revealed - they are mere
tokens by which a man may possess a woman, and nothing more.
The film's extraordinary emotional power derives primarily from
Danielle Darrieux's arresting portrayal of the main female protagonist
Louise (a.k.a. Madame de - we are never told her surname).
Darrieux, an icon of French cinema who began her career more than two
decades previously, burns the celluloid with her charm and beauty, and
yet she brings something else, an ability to convey intense inner
anguish by the subtlest of gestures. In
Madame de... she is at her most
devastating, at first delighting us as a woman who is brought to life
by true love, and then breaking our hearts as Louise's passion is
crushed and becomes transformed into a poison that extinguishes her
zest for life. In her long and illustrious career Danielle
Darrieux has turned in many great performances, but few can compare
with the exceptional power and poignancy of her portrayal in
Madame de... of a woman who is
revived and then cruelly destroyed by love.
Sharing the limelight with Mademoiselle Darrieux in this film are two
other celebrated screen icons, Charles Boyer and Vittorio De Sica.
In his youth, Boyer had been one of French cinema's leading matinee idols,
appearing opposite Darrieux in another landmark melodrama,
Mayerling
(1935). Boyer subsequently went on to forge a successful career
in Hollywood, playing the charismatic male lead in such films as
All This, and Heaven Too (1940)
and
Gaslight (1944), before
resuming his career in France in the 1950s. In
Madame de... Boyer is suitably cast
as the cynical villain of the piece, the kind of role he excelled in
during the latter phase of his career. Boyer's brutal
characterisation makes a perfect contrast with that of his co-star,
Vittorio De Sica - whereas the former relies on his position and wealth
to control the woman of his life, the latter does so solely through his
charm (and is hence doomed to fail). De Sica was Boyer's
counterpart in Italian cinema, with a distinguished acting career
behind him. A few years prior to appearing in this film, he
won international acclaim as a film director, bringing a new
perspective to Italian neo-realism with
Shoeshine
(1946),
Bicycle Thieves (1948) and
Umberto
D. (1952). De Sica's arresting performance in
Madame De..., easily one of his
finest, reminds us that, in addition to being one of the great
cineastes of the Twentieth Century, he was also an extremely
accomplished actor, one who brought to each of his
roles great depth and humanity.
The thing that perhaps most characterises the films of Max Ophüls
is their exceptional fluidity, and this is best exemplified in
Madame de... The entire film
flows with the effortless grace of a perfectly choreographed Viennese
waltz, and how delightful it is to be snatched out of reality and
become immersed in its captivating beauty, to be caught up in its flow
like a leaf in a stream. Ophüls' penchant for long, complex
tracking shots is what gives the film its striking fluid nature, most
vividly demonstrated by the protracted ballroom sequence in which
Louise gradually falls for the charms of Baron Donati. Although
it is played as one scene, the sequence spans several weeks, the
passing of time alluded to only by the snatches of dialogue and
changing costumes. As Louise and her new beau fall more deeply in
love in the course of their endless dance, we witness their
growing isolation as the ballroom becomes increasingly deserted.
Ultimately, they are the only couple on the dance floor - they have
found their own world, outcasts from society through their sinful
union, yet having no interest in anything but each other. This
beautifully orchestrated sequence conveys so many things about the
nature of romantic love, and does so with such exquisite subtly that
you have to watch it several times to fully appreciate the genius of
Max Ophüls. Can there be a film more enchanting, probing and
viciously ironic than the magnificent
Madame
de...?
© James Travers 2001
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Next Max Ophüls film:
Lola Montès (1955)