Film Review
The notoriety accompanying the release of Just Jaeckin's soft-core porn fantasy
Emmanuelle in 1974 had a profound
and lasting impact on French cinema in the mid-1970s, effectively castrating
the state censor and ushering in an era of far greater explicitness in the
on-screen depiction of sex and sexuality. One of the first beneficiaries
of this more liberal state of affairs was Barbet Schroeder's
Maîtresse,
a film that deals honestly with sadomasochism whilst at the same time pursuing
a fairly conventional romantic drama. The film's flagrant eroticism
proved to be too much for some critics and it met with a very hostile reaction
from a large segment of the French press. By today's standards, the
film is incredibly mild and you wonder what all the fuss was about.
Prior to this Barbet Schroeder had directed two other films that were similarly
attune to the air du temps -
More (1969)
and
La Vallée (1972), both strongly associated with the hippie
movement. Although he directed several notable films, it is as a producer
that Schroeder is best known. In his early twenties, he founded the
film company Les Films du Losange, which produced the films of many distinguished
auteur filmmakers of the New Wave era, most notably Éric Rohmer (
Ma nuit chez Maud,
Le Genou de Claire,
La Marquise d'O).
On
Maîtresse, Schroeder was assisted by Jean-François
Stévenin, at the time a prominent actor who later made his own directing
debut in 1978 with
Le Passe montagne.
As his cinematographer he engaged the great Néstor Almendros, a frequent
collaborator of François Truffaut, for whom he turned in some his
best work (
L'Enfant sauvage,
Les Deux Anglaises
et le Continent). Almendros's widely recognised flair for striking
visual compositions is very much in evidence in
Maîtresse, heightening
not just its erotic impact but also its emotional intensity.
The casting of the auteur's darling Bulle Ogier for the lead female role
was a no-brainer for Schroeder. She had already given him good service
on his previous film
La Vallée and prior to this she had wowed
the critics with her incredibly committed performances on Jacques Rivette
L'Amour fou (1969) and
Out 1 (1972). As
well as being a superlative actress, Ogier was stunningly beautiful and a
formidable screen presence, so to match her Schroeder needed an actor of
comparable ability, which is why he chose Gérard Depardieu.
Depardieu had recently shot to stardom through his appearance in Bertrand
Blier's iconoclastic take on the classic road movie,
Les Valseuses (1974) and already
he was showing signs of being a legend in his own lifetime. Depardieu's
solid physique is belied by the extraordinary sensitivity he conveys through
his performance, and partnering him with Ogier, whose seductive feminine
shell offers no indication of the almost macho toughness within, was a masterstroke.
By subtly inverting the male-female roles, these two remarkable actors bring
a fresh slant to the complexities of an intense love affair and make
Maîtresse
a fascinating study in romantic obsession.
© James Travers 2000
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Next Barbet Schroeder film:
Tricheurs (1984)
Film Synopsis
Olivier, a thirty-something from the provinces, arrives in Paris and through
a friend finds work as a door-to-door book salesman. This is how he
comes to meet Ariane, a seemingly respectable middle-class woman who lives
by herself. Olivier's ears prick up when Ariane lets slip that the
apartment below hers is unoccupied at the moment. Not long afterwards,
Olivier returns with his friend with the intention of breaking into and robbing
the empty apartment. They can hardly believe what they find - a room
fitted out as a sadomasochist's wildest fantasy, with all manner of kinky
outfits and pleasure-inducing equipment.
The two men's instinct is to beat a hasty retreat, but their exit is prevented
by a ferocious dog. It is now that Ariane makes her grand entrance,
descending a staircase in tight-fitting leather, a dominatrix of the first
rank. To repay Olivier for a favour rendered in the course of her work,
she allows the two men to go free, but Olivier cannot let her go. What
ensues is an emotional upheaval that will have a profound effect on both
him and Ariane...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.