Film Review
Encouraged by the success of
Police (1985), a bold but
popular attempt to instil greater realism into the policier genre, Maurice Pialat immediately committed
himself to a project he had long nurtured, an adaptation of Georges
Bernanos's 1926 novel
Sous le soleil
de Satan (a.k.a.
Under the
Sun of Satan). It was a surprising departure for an auteur
filmmaker whose only previous literary adaptation had been that of his
own novel,
Nous ne vieillirons pas ensemble
(1972). Pialat saw in Bernanos's novel an opportunity to express
his present disillusionment with cinema, specifically the abandonment of artistic
integrity under the diabolical influences of tawdry
commercialism. The novel's subject, a young priest tormented by
his doubts and a profound need to prove himself worthy of his vocation,
clearly had a resonance with Pialat himself, a filmmaker who,
throughout his career, was stricken with anxieties about his own
abilities, which were aggravated by his obsessive perfectionism and the
far from complimentary views of his detractors.
Prior to this, two of Bernanos's novels had been adapted by Robert
Bresson,
Le Journal d'un cure de campagne
(1950) and
Mouchette (1967), both widely
considered masterpieces of French cinema. Like Bresson, Pialat
adopts a coldly austere style of mise-en-scène for his film, but
unlike Bresson he drives his principal actors to exteriorise their
inner feelings, almost to the point of hysteria in a few scenes.
Pialat's liberal use of long, static takes, where the camera is
focussed immobile on one or two of the actors, gives the film an
uncomfortable intensity, and whilst the dialogue is dense and laden
with esoteric philosophical discussion it somehow exerts a mesmeric
hold on the spectator, like a mystical enchantment. And how could
we fail to be enchanted by Gérard Depardieu and Sandrine
Bonnaire, two actors driven to the absolute limits of their abilities
by a director who would settle for nothing less than perfection from
his cast and crew?
Depardieu had previously starred in two of Pialat's films,
Loulou
(1980), and
Police, and would
subsequently feature in the director's final film,
Le Garçu (1995). It
was the role of the conflicted country priest Donissan in
Sous le soleil de Satan which
allowed Pialat to get the most out of Depardieu, and in a career that
is awash with stunning performances, it is the one that stands out as
being particularly impressive. The contradiction between
Depardieu's bear-like physique and the natural gentleness of his
persona has been exploited by many filmmakers, but it is especially
well-utilised here by Pialat. Depardieu's Donissan is at first a
pathetic character, a confused, self-pitying wretch who resorts to
self-flagellation to tame his wayward spirit. But, through the
spiritual ordeal he undergoes, tested by the Devil in various
manifestations, he acquires a nobility that reveals to us what true
faith is: not blind subservience to the traditions of a particular
creed or random acts of charity, but the complete submission of the
will to that part of our nature that is inherently good.
Running in parallel with Donissan's painful journey towards saintliness
is Mouchette's gradual descent into Hell. Again, the casting of
Mouchette is perfect, Sandrine Bonnaire being one of those rare
actresses who can bring adolescent fragility and demonic possession to
the same character with absolute conviction (as she showed even more
memorably in Claude Chabrol's
La Cérémonie a
few years later). It was Pialat who gave Bonnaire who first
important role, in
À nos amours (1983), and
it was for Pialat that the actress has given some of her best
performances. As in Bresson's film, Mouchette is portrayed as a
victim of a male-oriented society that exploits and abuses women, so it
is not satanic evil that drive her to kill, but a desperate desire to
be free of male domination. Bonnaire's portrayal of Mouchette is
every bit as harrowing as Depardieu's Donissan - the two characters are
very much alike, both searching for something that will remove the
burden of doubt from their souls. Pialat himself appears in the
film, appropriately cast as Depardieu's spiritual mentor - symbolic
perhaps of the close bond between the actor and director.
Making few (if any) concessions to the prevailing trends in
conventional cinema,
Sous le soleil
de satan met with a very mixed reaction from the critics.
For some it was an unqualified masterpiece that represented the best in
auteur filmmaking; for others it was a self-conscious cinematic drudge,
another nail in the coffin of the film d'auteur. The critics'
ambivalence towards the film is reflected both in the fact that it was
only moderately successful at the box office (attracting just 0.8
million spectators, less than half of what Pialat's previous film
Police had achieved) and the fact
that it failed to win any of the seven Césars it was nominated
for in 1988. When the film was awarded the Palme d'Or at the
Cannes Film Festival in 1987 (the first French film to do so in twenty
years), the reaction from some was openly hostile - Wim Wenders'
Wings of Desire had been the
favourite for the top prize. Amid catcalls and whistles, Pialat
shook his fist at the audience and said: "If you don't like me, I can
tell you that I don't like you either."
To this day,
Sous le soleil de satan
is a film that divides critical opinion, although its supporters are
gaining the upper hand. Since he died in 2003, Pialat's oeuvre
has undergone a substantial reappraisal and his crucial part in
re-energising the auteur tradition in French cinema in the late 1980s
is gaining currency.
Sous le
soleil de satan is not Pialat's most accessible film but it is
unquestionably a major work, not only because of its inspired rendering
of a fine work of French literature, but because of its willingness to
defy the sloppy conventions of mainstream cinema. By forcing
actors to act, by using the camera as more than a stylistic device, and
by respecting the intelligence of his audience, Maurice Pialat imposed
his own rigorous aesthetic on French cinema and, in doing so, not only
helped to bring greater credibility to the film d'auteur, but also
influenced many others who would follow his example.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Maurice Pialat film:
Van Gogh (1991)