Film Review
Even though the biopic is enjoying a surge of popularity at the moment
it seems a tad excessive that the same year should see the release of
two films recounting episodes from the life of the same individual,
namely France's foremost couturier Yves Saint Laurent. In January
2014, Jalil Lespert brought us the
"official" biography,
namely the one sanctioned and supported by the designer's long-term
partner Pierre Bergé. Nine months on, we now have the
"unofficial" version, the one that Bergé did his utmost to
prevent being made and to which he gave not one iota of support.
Given that the director of this latter film, Bertrand Bonello, already
has a reputation for being something of a loose canon, the second
biography promises to be the most interesting and revealing of the two,
and it very nearly lives up to this promise.
Whereas Lespert's more conventional biopic convincingly accounts for
the creation of the YSL myth, focussing on the turbulent relationship
between the legendary couturier and his driven business partner,
Bonello's film probes a little more deeply and tries to deconstruct the
myth, concentrating more on the man's less well-publicised debauched
private life. It feels like an improbable mélange of
Oscar Wilde's
The Picture of Dorian
Gray and Marcel Proust's
À
la recherche du temps perdu (in one scene, the central
protagonist even adopts the name Swann). Instead of the
mysteriously ageing picture in an attic, Saint Laurent's secret life of
sensual overload is 'paid for' by the artistic toll it takes on him, by
the recurring bouts of depression that interrupt his flow of creative
brilliance. Bonello's Saint Laurent is the proverbial tortured
artist, a contradictory character whose public image of a shy,
inarticulate man hiding behind thick-lensed glasses is totally belied
by the wild hedonist that he was in private. YSL is shown to be a
pathetic figure who was at the mercy of two opposing forces - a
burning desire to create that made him a fashion icon and an addiction
to sensual excess that very nearly drove him to destruction.
Bonello's penchant for stylisation and raw sensuality, so evident in
his acclaimed previous film
L'Apollonide (2011), makes him
particularly well-suited to attempt a biography of a creative icon
whose grip on reality appeared tenuous at the best of times.
Saint Laurent is Bonello's most
visually exciting film to date and succeeds on at least two counts,
namely in transporting us back in time to that hugely eventful and
unimaginably colourful decade (1967-1976) when YSL was at the height of
his powers, and also in conveying a palpable sense of the burning
frenzy within which the couturier lived. Borrowing some of the
cinematic devices that were very much in vogue in the 1970s (such as
the use of split screens), the film has a keen retro feel as well as a
vibrant modernity. Occasionally, the stylisation is overdone to
the extent that it distracts from the narrative, but the overall effect
is positive - Bonello manages to bring his subject to life in a way
that Lespert didn't quite manage to in his film.
Pierre Niney's portrayal of Saint Laurent in Lespert's film was always
going to be a hard act to follow but Gaspard Ulliel at least equals his
predecessor's performance with an almost flawless imitation of the
great man himself. Like Niney, Ulliel (having had to lose 12
kilograms and study endless recorded interviews by YSL before filming
commenced) has such a strong resemblance to the fashion designer that
you could easily mistake him for the man himself. (Watch Pierre
Thoretton's 2010 documentary
L'Amour fou and you'll be
astounded by just how striking the resemblance is.) Ulliel's
convincing portrayal of the young Saint Laurent segues seamlessly into
that of his older self, poignantly played by a 69-year-old Helmut
Berger, who was famous in his youth as Luchino Visconti's chief muse.
Whilst this is unquestionably Ulliel's film, the supporting cast cannot
be overlooked. Jérémie Renier is a surprising
choice for the part of the hard-headed businessman Pierre Bergé
but is instantly believable in the role, not the Svengali-like
professional pimp Bergé has sometimes been characterised as
being, but a rounded individual genuinely committed to the success of
the man who was his life's lodestone. Equally impressive is Louis
Garrel as YSL's flamboyant gay lover Jacques de Bascher, the main
inspiration of rival designer Karl Lagerfeld. Whilst the affair
between Saint Laurent and de Bascher was mentioned in passing in
Lespert's film, here it is given much greater weight and marks an
intensely poignant episode in the lives of both men, a humane romantic
interlude that is the film's scorching focal point.
Free of the controlling influence of Pierre Bergé, Bonello's
uninhibited exposé of Yves Saint Laurent goes some way towards
deconstructing one of France's greatest cultural myths but, once again,
you are left with the impression that much has been left unsaid.
Despite Bonello's best efforts, the myth remains largely intact and, if
anything, Saint Laurent emerges even more enigmatic and
indecipherable. Judged on its own merits, the film is hard to
fault - the performances are excellent, the mise-en-scène
unflaggingly inspired, the design and editing breathtaking. The
director's most accomplished work to date, it offers a badly needed,
screamingly alive counterpoint to the slew of insipid, still-born
biopics that have polluted cinema screens over the past few
years. But the question remains: who
was Yves Saint Laurent? Maybe
we shall never know...
© James Travers 2014
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Next Bertrand Bonello film:
Nocturama (2016)