Film Review
Having launched the screen career of one Françoise Arnoul in
L'Épave
(1949), director Willy Rozier provided the same service for
Brigitte Bardot in this equally turgid melodrama.
Manina, la fille sans voile is
Rozier's best-known film, but this is only on account of its accidental
association with Bardot. Indeed, the film was only widely
distributed outside France after the actress had been baptised a sex
goddess in Roger Vadim's
Et Dieu... créa la femme
(1956). At the time of its release, the film courted controversy
with its salacious shots of Bardot posing provocatively in the
skimpiest of bikinis, something that led the actress's father to pursue
an unsuccessful court action to prevent the film's release.
Even more ahead-of-its-time than this gratuitous teen sexploitation are
the film's lengthy underwater sequences, which predate Jacques-Yves
Cousteau's groundbreaking
Le Monde du silence (1956) by
four years and are truly remarkable for their time. These,
together with some impressive tracking shots across the picturesque
Corsican landscape, accompanied by some authentic Corsican music, give
the film a poetry which, had it been supported by a less flimsy
narrative, would have made it a notable achievement. Alas,
Rozier's talents as both a screenwriter and director were sporadic and
minimal, so whilst the film occasionally impresses with its
cinematographic artistry, it fails to have much impact as a piece of
drama and merely ends up falling into the worthless cleft between melodrama and erotica.
The plodding narrative is not helped by the fact that all of the
characters are wafer-thin, and whilst the 17-year-old Bardot comes
close to setting the film alight with her charm and vitality, her
co-star Jean-François Calvé is dullness personified and
looks too visibly like someone who was cast more for his muscled
physique than his skill as an actor. Howard Vernon's ambiguous
character is the most interesting the film has to offer, but even this
ends up as a borrowed archetype when the drama reaches its horribly
predictable (and astoundingly badly realised) denouement.
Bardot's sizzlingly sensual presence will doubtless ensure that
Manina, la fille sans voile will
never be forgotten, at least not by devotees of low-grade erotica,
and, deeply flawed as the film is, it still has its fleeting moments of brilliance.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Inspired by a lecture, hard-up student Gérard sets about
recovering the lost treasure contained in a sunken Phoenician ship off
the coast of Corsica. With funds supplied by his fellow students,
Gérard heads off for Tangier, where he persuades a cigarette
smuggler named Eric to join him in his mad endeavour. Whilst
diving off the Lavezzi islands, Gérard gets to know Manina, the
attractive daughter of the local lighthouse keeper...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.