Film Review
With
Mitsou, director
Jacqueline Audry completed a handsome trio of Colette adaptations which
tells us everything we could ever want to know about a young woman's
sentimental education around the turn of the 20th century.
Audry's version of Colette's 1919 novel
Mitsou ou Comment l'esprit vient aux filles
is a characteristically light piece of confectionary, sickly sweet but
with just a tang of bitterness to it. Unlike Audry's previous
Colette adaptations -
Gigi (1949) and
Minne, l'ingénue libertine
(1950), which were filmed in lush black and white - this one was shot
in sumptuous Eastmancolor. The film's garish colour palette,
which was presumably meant to be imitative of the main character's
congenital vulgarity, jars somewhat in a few scenes whilst rendering
others laughably gauche. Life on the Front during World War I
could not have been portrayed less convincingly if Jacques Demy and
Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen had both been involved in the design -
suffice it to say that
Up the Front
(1972) could pass itself off as a serious WWI documentary by
comparison.
Realistic reconstructions of historical skirmishes was evidently not a
forte of Jacqueline Audry (she confirmed this fact later on in the even
more camply garish
Le Secret du Chevalier d'Éon),
so it's just as well she was so adept in other areas. Of her
achievements, few served her better than her ability to draw out the
nuances of Colette's novels and use these to add substance to her
intricate explorations of the female psyche, assisted by her husband Pierre
Laroche who was also her faithful screenwriter.
Danièle Delorme was the perfect muse for Audry's exploration of
early womanhood, having not only the physique and personality of a
typical Colette heroine, but also the ability to deliver a
multi-layered performance. It is with skill and integrity that
Delorme reveals the confused and contradictory individual that lies
beneath her seemingly insouchiant gamine exterior, a solitary child
working hard to fashion an adult identity for itself. As in
Audry's two previous Colette adaptations, Delorme absolutely steals the
film, not just through her inordinate charm, but through the exquisite
subtlety of her art.
Jacqueline Audry (at the time the only woman film director in France)
was renowned and often reviled for her honest depictions of female
sexuality. In
Olivia (1950), she had incensed
some critics by broaching the thorny subject of lesbianism (Edwige
Feuillère's uncomfortably realistic portrayal of a predatory
lesbian certainly gave the critics a lot to get their misogynistic
teeth into.) In
Mitsou,
Audry breached another taboo by showing its heroine indulging in not
one but two love affairs outside the sacred institution of
marriage. It's bad enough that Delorme is allowing herself to be
kept by Fernand Gravey, but to see her in bed with
another man, and a naked handsome
one at that, was just too much. Today, there is nothing in the
film that any sane person would find even remotely offensive, but in
the mid-1950s such frank allusions to illicit sex were best avoided and
Audry's habit of flouting propriety led some to regard her as an
immoral filmmaker. In fact, she was just slightly ahead of the
game, and more honest than most. Compare her version of
Gigi with the
plush MGM musical directed by Vincente
Minnelli and you'll see straight away which is the nearest to Colette's
original conception.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
France, during the First World War... Mitsou has risen above
poverty and obscurity to become a star of the Parisian music hall, but
her education is lacking and her taste atrocious for someone aspiring
to better herself socially. Now in her mid-twenties, she leads a
contented life and is happy to be the mistress of rich industrialist
Pierre Duroy-Lelong, even though he is more than twenty years her
senior. One day, she is surprised to find two handsome young
soldiers hiding in her wardrobe, placed there by her well-meaning
friend and stage partner Petite Chose. One of the soldiers,
Robert Bleu, finds himself drawn to Mitsou, and the attraction turns
out to be mutual. On his return to the Front, Robert sends Mitsou
a letter apologising for the fact that his duty as a military man will
prevent him from seeing her for some time. He cannot bring
himself to admit the truth that she is too vulgar to be his wife.
When Robert is injured in combat, Mitsou hastens to the hospital where
he is being treated and is confronted by his parents...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.