Film Review
One of Robert Bresson's most compelling and intense films,
Pickpocket is a powerfully moving
study in sin and redemption which deserves to rated one of the high
points of 1950s French cinema.
The film takes its cue from Dostoevsky's celebrated novel
Crime
and Punishment, in which the central character Raskolnikov
argues that crime is a justifiable activity for a certain superior
class of individual. As in Bresson's earlier
Journal d'un curé de campagne,
the narrative is guided by the inner voice of the central protagonist,
Michel - a technique which not only underscores the social alienation
of the character but also provides the only clue to his strangely
elusive psychology.
Nothing about Michel is revealed to us through his facial expressions,
body language or manner of speech. The actor who played him,
Martin LaSalle, was a non-professional who was trained by Bresson not
to show any outward sign of emotion in his performance. LaSalle
proved to be one of Bresson's better acteurs-modèles and exposes
his inner conflict and motivation with a subtle yet potent eloquence. Michel is
not the kind of character an audience can easily sympathise with (he
could go head-to-head with Norman Bates in the weirdness stakes and
probably win), and yet LaSalle somehow compels us to identify with him,
to tease out the shard of goodness that lies buried deep within his
troubled persona.
The visual style of
Pickpocket
is striking and quite different from that employed by Bresson on his
other films of this period, lacking the cold austerity that has become
the director's trademark. Léonce-Henri Burel's
cinematography has a definite Nouvelle Vague feel to it, and at times
it closely resembles Raoul Coutard's work on
À
bout de souffle (1960) and
Lola (1961). The film's
use of real locations in Paris (including the Metro) and harsh natural
lighting to achieve an unpolished realism is extremely redolent of the
early films of the French New Wave. Yet, at the same time,
Pickpocket is also very different
from the films of Godard, Truffaut, Demy, et al. A far more
sombre and contemplative work, its emotional core lies further beneath
the surface and there is a spiritual dimension that is so
characteristic of Bresson, an impression that is reinforced by his
choice of music. There is also an echo of classic film noir, in
that the main protagonist, a solitary anti-hero type, appears to be
perpetually excluded from the world he inhabits, his destiny governed
by forces that are beyond his control and by a woman to whom he becomes
ineluctably drawn.
Pickpocket is not, as it must
first appear, a study in the psychology of a criminal but rather a
variant on the classical morality play, in which a man must lose his
soul in order to save it. When we first meet him, the central
character Michel exists in a moral vacuum. He behaves as though
pickpocketing was not only a legitimate career option but actually one
that provides a great benefit to society. It is only towards the
end of the film that the truth begins to emerge and we finally
understand
why Michel acts as
he does. Far from being without conscience, he is actually someone
who is tortured by guilt, perhaps the guilt of a son who stole money
from his bedridden mother? It soon becomes evident that Michel's
moral decline into a life of crime was not driven by evil intent but by
a subconscious desire to be caught and made to atone for his first and
most unpardonable transgression.
Michel may not himself even be aware of why he does what he does.
Perhaps he really does believe his Dostoevskian self-justification,
that he is a member of that superior race which is not bound by the
usual social and moral codes. Yet, in the film's powerful
conclusion, which is surely one of the most exquisitely poignant
moments in Bresson's entire oeuvre, the dark curtain is lifted and the
truth is revealed. Michel learns who he is and finds his
redemption, through the forgiving face of the woman who has grown to
love him. With his sublime mastery of film technique and his
startling comprehension of the human psyche, Robert Bresson delivers
what is possibly the most deeply moving screen portrayal of a man's
fall from grace and his subsequent salvation.
Pickpocket is not only one of
Bresson's most accessible films, it is also one of his most
compassionate explorations of human frailty and a masterpiece of narrative economy.
© James Travers 2000
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Next Robert Bresson film:
Procès de Jeanne d'Arc (1962)