Film Review
After the highly controversial
Beau-père (1981),
director Bertrand Blier played it safe with his next film
La Femme de mon pote (1983), a
lightweight romantic comedy which saw the unlikely pairing of Isabelle
Huppert with top comic of the moment, Coluche. Whilst this latter
film was a hit at the French box office, it lacked Blier's iconoclastic
touch - something which cannot be said for the film that came
next.
Notre histoire
marks a return to the more subversive Blier, combining the anarchic
humour of
Les Valseuses (1974) with the
free-format surrealism of
Buffet froid (1979).
Whilst it is generally not considered Blier's best work, the film is
one of his most uninhibited and offers a portrayal of obsessive love
that is compelling and profoundly disturbing, all the more so for the
wry anti-bourgeois comedy dressing that Blier liberally scatters over it.
The film probably would not have worked without two very accomplished
actors to carry off the complex lead roles, and it is fortunate that
Blier was able to call upon the services of two of the best - Alain
Delon and Nathalie Baye. Both actors appear strangely at home in
Blier's utterly bizarre fantasy world, and for Delon the film offered a
welcome break from his run of tough guy gangster/cop roles that had
become the mainstay of his career by this point. Delon appears to
relish every line that Blier gives him and, as a burned out, depressive
alcoholic, he turns in a fine tragicomic performance that must surely
rate as one of his best. Baye is no less impressive and it is no
accident that, not long after this film, she became one of French
cinema's most sought-after and most highly paid actresses. The
Delon-Baye pairing makes
Notre
histoire one of Blier's most enjoyable films, even if the film
suffers from a distinct lack of structure and a tendency to drift too
far and too carelessly into the theatre of the absurd. The
distinguished supporting cast includes established performers such as
Michel Galabru and Geneviève Fontanel and several actors who
were, at the time, practically unknown, but who went on to become major
stars of French cinema - Jean Reno, Vincent Lindon, Gérard
Darmon and Jean-Pierre Darroussin, all looking implausibly young and
hirsute.
Despite Blier's reputation (three of his six previous films had been
highly successful) and a flawless central performance from Alain Delon,
Notre histore divided the
critics and was only a moderate success. In France, the film
attracted an audience of just under 0.9 million, slightly better than
Buffet froid but way below the 5.7
million of
Les Valseuses.
It was nominated for four Césars in 1985, winning awards for the
Best Actor (Alain Delon - his only win to date) and Best Original
Screenplay. Although overshadowed by the great films that
Bertrand Blier would subsequently go on to make -
Tenue
de soirée (1986),
Trop belle pour toi (1989) and
Merci
la vie (1991) -
Notre
histoire is too good, too weird to overlook. It should be
considered one of the director's more inspired works - a deliriously
eccentric existential comedy of manners with shades of Beckett and
Ionesco, all tastefully garnished with a deliciously piquant Blier
sauce. As they say in France, miam miam.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Bertrand Blier film:
Tenue de soirée (1986)
Film Synopsis
Robert Avranche is sitting by himself on a train, contemplating the utter
pointlessness of his existence, when an attractive young woman enters his
compartment and tries to engage him in conversation. The depressed
forty-something is in no mood for socialising but he listens as the stranger
tells her story, about a woman who meets a lonely man on a train and invites
him to sleep with her. The hint may not be subtle but it works and
at the next stop Robert finds he is following the woman when she leaves the
train. Donatienne - that is her name - invites him back to her chalet-style
house and they spend the night together.
The liaison is well-timed for Robert, who has been in a rut lately and wants
to forget about the wife and children he has left behind in Paris. Unfortunately,
Donatienne has no intention of letting the relationship go any further and,
once she has had her fun, she is keen for her lover to take his leave of
her. This is something that Robert is unable to do. He knows
that he cannot just walk away now that he has met someone who seems to be
his ideal partner. Then he discovers the truth about Donatienne.
It appears that the young woman is incapable of devoting herself to one man,
so she makes a habit of going to bed with any man who takes her fancy.
As Donatienne's rowdy entourage show up at her home in droves, Robert feels
out of place but he still hangs on, curious to find out more about the bewitching
siren he met on the train. In the course of a wild party, he is forced
into the bed of a neighbour. Returning to Donatienne's house, Robert
finds that the object of his new obsession has vanished. He immediately
sets out to find her, certain now that he can never let her go...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.