Film Review
Director Jean Gourguet's most celebrated film,
Maternité clandestine was
groundbreaking for its time and courted controversy with its
near-the-knuckle depiction of a teen pregnancy. Even though he
made over forty films in a career that spanned five decades (late 1920s
to early 1960s), Gourguet is virtually forgotten today, and yet he
deserves to be considered an important precursor to the Nouvelle Vague,
a talented maverick who straddled the divide between commercial cinema
and the emerging auteur trend in France during the 1950s. It was
in this, his most productive decade, that he had most success with his
uncompromising portraits of youth, tackling themes that most other
directors considered too hot to handle.
Gourguet was not the only French filmmaker who was profoundly concerned
with the plight of disenfranchised youngsters. Youth disaffection
and rebellion was a theme that was highly current in the 1950s, not
just in France but throughout much of the western world. Even
Jean Delannoy, one of high priests of 'conventional' French cinema, was
driven to broach the issue in one of his films,
Chiens perdus sans colliers
(1955), and Marcel Carné strayed onto the subject somewhat
belatedly in
Terrain vague (1960).
François Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959) is the
best-known film of this genre, but even this seems tame and bourgeois
compared with the more authentic slices of life that Gourguet served up
in his films of the early 1950s.
At a time when juvenile delinquency was one of the most pressing social
concerns in France, it is revealing that Gourguet chooses to portray
his young rebels in a wholly sympathetic light. Right at the
start of the film, the ragtag band of teenagers, infants and young men
who live by petty pilfering are portrayed as victims of an uncaring
society, robbed of one or both parents by the war or else abandoned to
fend for themselves in the austere aftermath that followed. There
is a strong sense of solidarity that binds them together and makes them
a model community, happy in their exclusion from the society that
spurns them. Outlaws they may be, but they are not
villains. When a young girl tries to kill herself, these
dirty-faced angels waste not a second in coming to her aid, providing
the family she needs to get through the crisis of child birth.
Gourguet's heart-warming film forces its audience to reappraise its
prejudices and recognise that alienated youngsters are not the enemy
of society, but the victims of an imperfect and far too judgemental
system.
Gourguet's obvious preference for real locations over studio sets is
what gives
Maternité
clandestine its raw authenticity and makes it a harbinger for
the French New Wave. The film's naturalism also derives from the
ensemble of mostly inexperienced young actors that make up the bulk of
the cast, several of whom would go on to become well-known, if not
outright stars: Dany Carrel, Michel Roux, Maurice Sarfati, Daniel
Cauchy and Jean-Pierre Mocky. Having made it as an actor, Mocky
would take up the baton from Gourguet with his own iconoclastic brand
of cinema. In addition to these fresh-faced newcomers, Gourguet
avails himself of the services of some well-regarded character actors:
Pierre Larquey, Noël Roquevert, Dora Doll and Jane
Marken. The latter add to the film's good-natured charm without
stealing the focus from the younger cast members, who provide the film
with its heart and soul.
Maternité clandestine
has a acquired a certain notoriety by virtue of the two scenes in which
twenty-year-old Dany Carrel bares her breasts, one of which depicts
Carrel breastfeeding a newborn child. Outré as these
scenes are, they are mild transgressions compared with the film's most
shocking sequence offering a graphic depiction of child birth.
Not only is Carrel seen to be visibly in agony as she goes into labour,
but the birth itself is shown in gory detail. Gourguet spares us
nothing, and it's hard to think of a film prior to this in which child
birth is presented in such a starkly realistic way. (The chance
is that at least half of the audience fainted at the point when the
baby 'pops out'.)
These moments of shock and awe aside,
Maternité
clandestine is for the most part a low-key film that makes a
reasonable job of combining social realism with more traditional
melodrama. The plot is admittedly something of a potpourri, and
includes a scene lifted from a Marcel Pagnol film, with the upper crust
grandparents of Carrel's baby refusing to accept any responsibility for
the illegitimate birth. To make up for this, the characters are
well-drawn and convincingly played, the performances of Dany Carrel and
Pierre Larquey being of particular note. Gourguet's modest but
engaging film touched a nerve and was enough of a success for its
director to purchase a cinema (
L'Escurial
on the Boulevard de Port-Royal in Paris), where he could indulge his
passion for cinema for the rest of his life.
© James Travers 2015
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