Film Review
In
Manèges, one of his
darkest and most inspired films, director Yves Allégret paints
the most depressingly cynical view of humanity imaginable.
Even bleaker and more pessimistic than Julien Duvivier's late excursions
into abject despair, the film shows only the worst aspects of human
nature - deceit and opportunism masquerading as love, love that becomes
twisted into revulsion and hatred - and offers us not one scintilla of
hope. The film completes a remarkable cycle of three films which
Allégret made with screenwriter Jacques Sigurd and which were an
extension of the poetic realist style pioneered by Marcel Carné
and Jacques Prévert in the 1930s. In common with
Dédée
d'Anvers (1948) and
Une si jolie petite plage
(1949),
Manèges is an utterly
grim study in personal entrapment, where the ill-fated
protagonists are taken prisoner by a cruel set of circumstances which
stifle all their hopes and from which there is not the slighest possibility of escape.
Manèges has none of the
dark romanticism of
Dédée
d'Anvers and the haunting lyricism of
Une si jolie petite plage. It
is a kind of über-film noir which seems to revel in painting each
of the three main characters in the worst possible light, so that we never
have the opportunity to sympathise with any of them. They all get
what they deserve - the naïve husband, the manipulative wife and
the grotesque mother-in-law. As the husband who is totally blind
to his wife's faults and then grows to hate her as the truth is
revealed to him, Bernard Blier gives one of the most effective
performances in his long and distinguished career. We ought to
pity his character as his illusions are ripped apart by his harpy-like
mother-in-law, but we do not. He is equally deserving of our
contempt, a weak and foolish man who commits the ultimate atrocity when
his folly is exposed, punishing the ones who deceived him with a
staggering show of heartlessness.
And who better to portray the seductive, self-interested femme fatale than
Simone Signoret, an actress who specialised in playing this kind of
cold, calculating venality, most famously in H.G. Clouzot's
Les
Diaboliques (1955). Signoret's portrayal of a
social-climbing parasite is one her most shocking creations, a fiend in
human form who is apparently without any scruples and who has not even
the meanest approximation to a human soul. (As her character is
the only one not to tell her own story, we cannot be entirely sure
whether she is as bad as she is portrayed. Is it possible that
her mother has exaggerated her faults to spite her
husband?) At the time she made the film, Signoret was
married to Yves Allégret and it was Allégret who gave her
her first significant screen role, in
Dédée
d'Anvers. This was the last occasion they worked together;
in the summer of 1949 Signoret met and fell in love with a young singer
named Yves Montand and walked out on Allégret, oddly mirroring
what her character had sought to do in
Manèges (albeit with more
honest motives).
The film's other stand-out performance is supplied by Jane Marken, one
of the great unsung supporting actors of French cinema who made her
screen debut in the silent era and was famously the first Mrs Jules
Berry. Marken worked with some of the great cineastes of her day
- Abel Gance, Jean Renoir, Julien Duvivier, Sacha Guitry, Jacques
Becker and Marcel Carné. After the war Yves
Allégret gave her career a boost, casting her in her most
memorable role in
Manèges (off-screen,
Marken and Allégret had once persued a brief amorous
liaison). As the mother-in-law from Hell, Marken turns in an
extraordinary performance, as convincing a portrayal of loathsome
nastiness as you are ever likely to find in any film. Watching
her character assault the helpless Blier with her vile confession is a
more viscerally shocking experience than that provided by
the famous shower scene in Hitchcock's
Pyscho
- it is a relentless, despicably cruel hatchet job and we feel nothing
for her, absolutely nothing, when her world comes crashing down about
her in the film's devastating last few minutes. Some people
deserve to go to Hell.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Yves Allégret film:
Les Miracles n'ont lieu qu'une fois (1951)
Film Synopsis
As his wife Dora lies close to death in a hospital bed after a horrific
car accident, Robert looks back with guilt and tenderness on their
brief life together. The devoted husband, he can think only of
the happier times, convinced that theirs was a perfect marriage.
This illusion is shattered when Dora's embittered mother tells Robert
the truth about his wife. Dora only married Robert for his money
and has been bleeding him dry, to the point where he ends up having to
sell his business, a riding school. But there is worse: without
him knowing, Dora has taken a secret lover whilst ruthlessly plotting
her next move up the social ladder...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.