Film Review
It was her adaptation of Colette's famous novel
Gigi that put director Jacqueline
Audry on the map and launched her lead actress in that film,
Danièle Delorme, on her prolific screen career.
Immediately after this success, Audry and Delorme pooled their
respective talents on another exemplary Colette adaptation, this time
the writer's 1909 novel
L'Ingénue
libertine. With its amusing but delicate treatment of a
free-spirited young woman's search for freedom and fulfilment by
challenging the social strictures of her time, the film has an
unmistakable feminist slant and presages the more provocative films
that Audry would subsequently make,
Olivia (1951) and
Mitsou (1956).
One of the remarkably few female directors working in a male-dominated
industry, Jacqueline Audry brought a fresh approach to the portrayal of
women in cinema, in much the same way that Colette did in early 20th
century literature with her (at the time) scandalous novels. In
doing so, she was very much in the vanguard of the feminist movement
and watching her films of the 1950s today one is easily impressed by
the frankness and sincerity with which broaches the then thorny issue
of female sexuality. There is a refreshing honesty to
Minne, l'ingénue libertine
but also an innocence which, together with Audry's light-touch
mise-en-scène and the film's authentic recreation of Belle
Époque Paris, perfectly evokes Colette's unique world, an
idyllic yet tightly corseted place in which women strive and fail to
find fulfilment.
Danièle Delorme was excellent as Gigi and she is no less
captivating as Minne, a likeable minx who, despite her habit of
stripping down to her frilly underwear at the drop of a hat, comes
across less as a woman of loose morals and more a romantic heroine at
war with bourgeois respectability. As her husband (humorously
played by Franck Villard) is patently a conjugal inadequate, Minnie is
justified in doing what the French casually term "faisant les 400
coups", the equivalent English expression being "sowing her wild
oats". Of course, you can't make an omelette without
breaking eggs, and Minnie's amorous itinerary is soon strewn with
broken hearts and fractured egos, Jean Tissier being the only one of
her victims to escape with his dignity intact, in the film's most
memorable scene. The mocking satirical tone of Colette's novel is
scarcely discernible but to make up for this there are some humorous
interludes, such as the sequence in which the heroine is trailed across
Paris by the world's most inept private detective. Being a light comedy,
Minne, l'ingénue libertine hasn't
the psychological depth of Audry's other literary adaptations but it is
nonetheless an engaging piece, one of the director's most entertaining
films.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Minnie is a flighty young woman who, bored with her mundane bourgeois
existence, takes refuge in her childish fantasies. On her wedding
night, she regales her husband Antoine with a lurid account of a
passionate liaison she once had with a hoodlum. Of course, it is
a pure fiction but Antoine swallows every word of it, not the best
start to a marriage. Unable to find fulfilment and happiness in
the conjugal home, Minnie looks elsewhere for these and is soon
pursuing a succession of brief romantic escapades with other men.
When Antoine begins to suspect that his wife is unfaithful, he engages
the services of a private detective...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.