Film Review
Jeannine Deckers, better known as The Singing Nun, may not have enjoyed
anything like the longevity of Edith Piaf or Serge Gainsbourg, but she
is just as deserving of a biopic as these singing legends, as this
eye-opening film from Belgian filmmaker Stijn Coninx amply
demonstrates. Under her original stage name, Soeur Sourire,
Deckers was catapulted to international fame in 1963 with the release
of her single
Dominique,
which became a worldwide hit and reached number one in the American pop
charts (the first Belgian song to do so). What made this
achievement all the more remarkable (other than the fact that the song is
so unutterably twee that it will cause your cranium to explode if you
listen to it more than three times) was that Deckers belonged, at the
time, to a Dominican order of nuns who, apparently, did nothing to
encourage her talent for music. As Coninx's biopic demonstrates,
Deckers was far from being the saintly heroine she was portrayed as in
the media at the height of her fame, and her life was anything but a
bed of roses. She was, to put it bluntly, a bit of a monster.
Stijn Coninx is best known for his 1992 film
Daens, another biographical piece
on the life of a famous Belgian priest.
Soeur Sourire is a far less
distinguished offering but it should be credited for presenting
Deckers' life story with brutal honesty, not glossing over the more
sordid and controversial aspects of the singer's life, as Henry Koster
did in his painfully anodyne 1966 film
The Singing Nun (featuring Debbie
Reynolds). Right from the off, Deckers is portrayed as a
headstrong egoist who rejects all kinds of authority (how odd that she
should choose to be a nun) and treats everyone with contempt, including
the woman who later becomes her lesbian lover and death
companion. Deckers is shown to be arrogant, self-centred and
wilfully aggressive, so much so that it is extremely hard for the
audience to sympathise with her, which is perhaps the main shortcoming
of the film. Coninx's Deckers has so few redeeming features that
it is nigh on impossible to engage with her. If Coninx loathes
her, as he so evidently does, why should we warm to her?
Cécile De France was reputedly delighted to have been offered
the role of Jeannine Deckers and she fits the part so perfectly that
you might think she had been the singer's understudy. At 35, the
Belgian actress is highly sought after by both French and Belgian
filmmakers and deserves her international reputation.
Soeur Sourire is arguably one of
her career highpoints, even if the film overall struggles to match the
excellence of her personal contribution. Cécile De France
not only bears a striking physical resemblance to Deckers, she also has
no difficulty conveying her complex, contradictory personality, and
does so with unfaltering conviction. One minute Deckers is a
sweet nun smiling beatifically, a picture of innocence; the next she is
the Devil's own mistress, lunging out at anything that gets in her way
and generally behaving like a class A bitch. The supporting cast
provide a more than satisfactory complement to De France's feisty
screen presence; the one inspired touch is the casting of Tsilla
Chelton (a much-loved doyenne of French cinema) as an elderly nun who
has a mischievous streak that pointedly mirrors Deckers' wayward nature.
Soeur Sourire goes some way
towards unbundling the complex personality that was Jeannine Deckers
but it falls short of giving a totally coherent and credible
picture. The film's allusions to the way in which the singer was
cynically exploited and abandoned by her record company and the
Catholic church are pretty mealy mouthed and the you can't help feeling
the director was just a little too cautious (by which I mean utterly
petrified) of causing offence. (This is also apparent in Coninx's
decision not to refer to Deckers' sister in the film - he replaces her
with a fictitious cousin.) The sketchy suggestion that Deckers' suicide
in 1985 was the result of her being ripped off by Philips and the
Church (leaving her with a staggering tax demand) deserves to have been
fleshed out with far more detail, not reduced to a brief, muddled
montage that you have to watch three times to understand. It is a
shame that Coninx felt he had to skate over the most intriguing elements
of Deckers' life story, because such obvious pusillanimity weakens the
film's authenticity and prevents the tragic ending from having the
impact it deserves. The Singing Nun should have been laid to rest
with slightly more respect than this (even if her most famous song
has been known to cause permanent brain damage).
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Jeannine Deckers, better known as Soeur Sourire or The Singing Nun,
became an international pop star in the 1960s. Her albums sold by
the millions and in 1963 her hit song
Dominque
overtook the Beatles and Elvis Presley in the charts. But her
fame was short-lived and she was soon forgotten by all but her most
loyal fans. Her career petered out in the 1980s and her life was
to end in tragedy. Who exactly was Jeannine Deckers?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.