Film Review
With
Sylvie et le fantôme,
director Claude Autant-Lara takes the classic coming-of-age concept and
gives it a fresh and totally bizarre spin, the result being one of his
weirdest and most beguiling films. The first film that
Autant-Lara made after the Occupation, it is based on a successful
stage play by Alfred Adam (who is far better known as an actor than a
playwright), first performed at the Théâtre de l'Atelier
in Paris in 1943. Not only does the film feature Odette Joyeux,
the highly photogenic star of the three films that Autant-Lara made
during the Occupation, it also avails itself of the services of three
talented performers who would enjoy a meteoric rise to stardom over the
following decades - François Périer, Jean Desailly and -
most surprisingly - Jacques Tati. Pierre Larquey's inclusion in
the cast should come as absolutely no surprise, as he was in
practically
every French film
of this era (implying he was either exceptionally energetic or had at
least a dozen identical siblings).
Tati is an unlikely choice for the ghost of the handsome lover with
whom the elfin Joyeux becomes besotted but his penchant for physical
comedy was what won him the role and made him an indispensable addition
to the cast. In his youth (back in the 30s), Tati was famous for
an act in which he mimed a range of sports, so he was well-suited for
the non-speaking role of the lithe and acrobatic ghost. Not long
afterwards, Tati began his film career proper, directing
L'École des facteurs
(1947), the first in a series of idiosyncratic comedies that would earn
him international acclaim and a secure place in film history.
It would be easy to dismiss
Sylvie et
le fantôme as
gimmicky were it not for the fact that its principal gimmick - namely
the titular ghost - is so brilliantly realised. This involved the
use of an old theatrical trick known as Pepper's Ghost, which dates
back to the 16th century. The technique requires the use of two
sets positioned at right-angles to each other, one being the mirror
image of the other. In one set, Tati (as the ghost) performs his
scenes alone, and these are reflected in a glass screen positioned at
45 degrees in front of the main set, creating the illusion of a ghost
appearing amidst the 'flesh and blood' actors in the main set. By adjusting
the lighting in both sets, Tati's image can be made to appear and
disappear. The technique is ludicrously simple (no laborious
post-production), yet what we see on the screen is simply amazing.
When it was first released,
Sylvie
et le fantôme was derided by the critics on both sides of
the Atlantic for its whimsical (some might say idiotic) plot.
Perhaps if Autant-Lara had been brave enough to cast a younger actress
than Joyeux in the lead role (i.e. one who actually looks as if she is
16, not early 20s-ish) the story might have had a tad more
credibility. It's hard to believe how anyone, even a gauche
16-year-old, can mistake a real ghost for what is obviously a man with
a sheet over his head (at best, he would just about pass as a member of the Ku Klux Klan), and
when three men start running about with sheets over their heads one's
suspension of disbelief does tend to wane a little. Taken too
seriously,
Sylvie et le fantôme
soon becomes ridiculous, but if you embrace it in the spirit in which
it was meant (pun intended) it becomes a fun romp - a film that
literally basks in Jacques Tati's reflected glory.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Claude Autant-Lara film:
Le Diable au corps (1947)
Film Synopsis
Sylvie is an imaginative 16 year old girl who has fallen in love with a man in an old
portrait - Alain de Francigny, her grandmother's lover, who died many years ago in a duel.
She is upset when her father is forced to sell the painting to allow them to go on living
in their old château. Amused by his daughter's fantasies, the Baron engages
an actor to play the part of a ghost, to roam the castle on his daughter's birthday night.
Two younger men, who are both attracted to Sylvie, also agree to pretend to be ghosts,
in the hope of gaining her affections. Needless-to-say, the real ghost of Alain de Francigny
is far from amused at this usurpation of his role...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.