Film Review
29th January 1965 saw the French release of
Mata Hari Agent H21, a
Franco-Italian period drama directed by Jean-Louis Richard. The
screenplay was written by Richard in collaboration with François
Truffaut, the famous New Wave director whose films Richard frequently
worked on, either as a writer or as an actor. The renowned
actress Jeanne Moreau was the obvious choice to play the part of
Margaretha Geertruida Zelle, a woman of Dutch origins who was better
known during WWI as the German spy Mata Hari (meaning the sun's
daughter).
Moreau was famously Truffaut's muse at the time and Richard was the
father of her son. It should be noted that Moreau's performance
has nothing in common with the flamboyant melodrama imagined for Greta
Garbo in the 1930s. Moreau's interpretation of Mata Hari shows a
woman with many faces - fragile and dangerous, pure and diabolical,
loving and cold-hearted. Filmed between Anthony Asquith's
The Yellow Rolls-Royce and Louis
Malle's
Viva Maria!, this tender and
melancholic piece of work follows a human legend who was a victim
of circumstances and who, without her knowing it, became a myth.
This French version of the notorious spy's life centres less on Mata
Hari's romantic escapades and more on those that reveal the person she
actually was. The truth is that Mata Hari was not an exceptional
spy. In fact, she delivered very little information of value to
her various employers. Once more, fiction and reality are two
different things and we never saw a more mundane spy career glorified
with such an inventive scenario.
Alongside Jeanne Moreau we recognize two marvellous actors: Jean-Louis
Trintignant and Claude rich. Trintignant first received
international recognition in 1956 when he was paired with Brigitte
Bardot in Roger Vadim's
Et dieu crea la femme....
and met with further acclaim when he starred in Claude Lelouch's
Un homme et une femme
(1966). Claude Rich is an eclectic actor of stage and screen
(here, he plays Mata Hari's chauffeur) who began his career in the
1950s in René Clair's
Les Grandes manoeuvres.
Both Trintignant and Rich are important figures in French cinema,
eagerly sought after by world-renowned filmmakers and both give great
value in this enjoyable Mata Hari romp.
© James Travers, Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Louis Richard film:
Bonne chance, Charlie (1962)
Film Synopsis
The travails of WWI do not prevent the Alcazar music hall from
being sold out for the performance given by the star of the show, a
beautiful dancer of Javanese origin named Mata-Hari. In a crowd
consisting of civilians and soldiers, some men are sketching the dancer
in her exotic outfit. Another man is busy with a pen and paper,
but he is not drawing - he is writing down a series of numbers, numbers
which seem to tally with the movements of Mata-Hari's fingers whilst
she is dancing. When she returns to her dressing room, Mata-Hari
finds a huge bouquet of flowers from an unknown admirer. On the
seemingly blank visiting card she uncovers a message inviting her to a
secret rendezvous in a Parisian street. Here she meets Ludovic,
the man who received her coded message at the theatre. He
instructs her to attend a society party that same evening, where she
will meet a certain Captain François Lasalle. The latter
will be carrying an attaché case containing some secret
documents. Mata-Hari, otherwise known as agent H21, is a German
spy, and her next assignment is to seduce Lasalle and lure him back to
her apartment so that the vital documents can be stolen. It will
be a night that will decide Mata-Hari's future...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.