Film Review
Joël Séria could not have made a more auspicious and provocative
start to his filmmaking career than with
Mais ne nous délivrez
pas du mal (a.k.a.
Don't Deliver Us From Evil), a Satanic gamine
rehash of
Les 400 coups
that revels in its gruesomely Baudelairean take on nascent teen sexuality.
The film's portrayal of two demonic adolescents casually inflaming the male
libido in between lesser sins - murdering caged birds and desecrating the
rituals of the Catholic mass - was unlikely to go down well with the predominantly
conservative press at the time and, inevitably, it soon fell foul of an all
too puritanical government censor. An unwarranted ban may have robbed
Séria's extraordinary debut feature of the critical acclaim it deserved
at the time but it did not prevent it from going on to become a cult classic,
one of the few auteur offerings from a French filmmaker to broach the thorny
subject of teenage sexual awakening with barefaced honesty, and with a stark
and sensual poetry to rival anything from the French New Wave.
It would be another five years before Séria was able to win over both
critics and audiences with
Les
Galettes de Pont-Aven, a comically erotic re-telling of Somerset
Maugham's novel
The Moon and Sixpence. This, along with his
subsequent
Marie-poupée
(1976), a brave foray into fetishism, revealed a remarkably astute auteur
filmmaker of rare originality and honesty, The critical reaction to
Marie-poupée was not positive, however, and the predictable
public backlash effectively put the kibosh on Séria's career, forcing
him to toe the line of mainstream acceptability by sticking to safer subjects
for the remainder of his career in cinema and television. Had the critics
been kinder to hum, Séria could easily have been one of the leading
auteurs of the post-French New Wave generation.
That Joël Séria deserved better is immediately apparent from
just one casual viewing of
Mais ne nous délivrez pas du mal.
A far cry from the anodyne coming-of-age mush that was prevalent at the time,
this represents a dazzlingly authentic exploration of the diabolic primeval
perversity that is so much a part of the human condition - a canker of the
soul that has its most devastating and lasting impact in early adolescence,
when the individual is at his most vulnerable and is least well equipped
to cope with the primal impulses that assail him amid that hormonal tempest
that marks the onset of adulthood. The film takes as its inspiration
a notorious real-life story from 1954, dubbed the Parker-Hulme murder case,
in which a teenage girl killed her mother in cold blood with the help of
her best friend.
What made the film so especially shocking to a contemporary French audience
is that the two depraved youngsters are not your usual argot-spitting urban
riff-raff but the angelically turned out offspring of respectable bourgeois
families. In the lead roles Anne and Lore, Jeanne Goupil (the director's
future wife and dependable muse) and Catherine Wagener are as compulsively
engaging as they are remorselessly vile, and it is to the film's credit that
neither girl loses our sympathies nor her delicate aura of gamine vulnerability,
no matter how disgusting and depraved their demonically construed actions
become.
Séria comes dangerously close to full-on child pornography in a few
scenes but at no point does he overstep the mark, avoiding the self-serving
excesses of the exploitation flicks of this era. There are just enough
flashes of unseemly eroticism to make us feel mildly queasy and remind ourselves
what a dangerous and terrifying thing sex can be when it first gets a grip
on the adolescent mind. The film's most shocking scene is not the vicious
murder that seals the heroine's mutual fate, nor the fiery denouement that
momentarily chills the blood of the spectator, but two earlier ones in which
a fully grown adult male throws himself on one of the girls and we watch
helplessly as the sad pathetic creature struggles in vain to thwart an impending
rape. Séria presents these assaults in the coldly dispassionate
manner of a wildlife documentary, depicting nature at its reddest in tooth
and claw.
The deeds that make up this infernal litany of evil may be monstrous - what
can be more disgusting than an angelic little girl delighting in the misery
she can inflict on others? - but Séria leaves us in no doubt that
the real evil lies not in these two misguided misfits, but in a warped
and even more repellent society that seeks to hide its crimes and hypocrisies
beneath a thin veil of deceit and forced piety. Notice the libidinous
smirks plastered all over the transfixed faces of the church congregation
as a priest delivers a sermon attacking the sins of the flesh, his words
inspiring not thoughts of abstinence but sordid recollection of carnal delights
already enjoyed. How readily do the unknowing parents applaud the girls'
recital of Baudelaire's
La Mort des Amants at the climax of the film
- if only they had understood the poem's meaning the tragic conclusion would
have been all too readily anticipated,
© James Travers 2020
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Anne de Boissy and Lore Fournier are the best of friends. Both come
from respectable bourgeois families and they share the same propensity for
mischief-making at the strict convent school where they are reluctant boarders.
Despite their young age - both are barely into their teens - they are sexually
precocious and nurture a morbid obsession with sex and death. During
the long summer vacation, with her parents away on holiday, Anne invites
Lore to stay with her at her large country estate. Rebelling against
their Catholic indoctrination, the two girls enact increasingly wicked pranks
to assert their independence and veneration of evil. Their principal
victim is Émile, a cow farmer, who succumbs too easily to their flagrant
flirtations. To punish this unfortunate after his clumsy attempt to
rape Lore, the two friends call at his farm one night and set fire to the
hayricks.
An even crueller 'chastisement' is devised for Léon, a mentally deficient
forty-something who works at the girls' school as an odd-job man: the little
pet birds he cherishes are slain and his meagre possessions are destroyed.
Neither Anne nor Lore is troubled by conscience or fear of discovery, until
the fateful night when they lure a stranded motorist back to Anne's private
den at her parents' chateau. Unable to resist the two nubile teens
as they strip down to their underwear, the motorist throws himself onto Lore,
and is beaten to death by Anne in a desperate attempt to prevent her friend
from being raped. Disposing of the man's bulky corpse proves to be
an easy task. Living with the consequences of killing a human being
proves to be a much greater challenge. Fearing the police are on to
them, the girls decide there is but one way out if they are to avoid being
separated forever. Only in Hell will they find the rewards they seek...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.