Film Review
Ah, the discreet charm of the bourgeoisie... Bertrand Blier's most
acclaimed film,
Trop belle pour toi owes
so much to Luis Buñuel that you could almost swear Buñuel
had a hand in making it. Blier not only shares Buñuel's love of
the absurd but also has something of his iconoclastic temperament,
gleefully shattering the conventions of cinema whilst setting fire to
the sacred cows of polite middle-class society.
On paper,
Trop belle pour toi is the most
banal of subjects, a humdrum tale of marital infidelity in which a man
falls in love with his secretary and ends up losing both his wife and
his mistress. Yet, as in all of Blier's films, the story is
infinitely less important than what the director does with it.
Here, in his most inspired, most beautifully composed film, Bertrand
Blier is far less concerned with incident (who does what to whom and
how) than with the underlying passions that take possession of his
characters and cruelly wrecks their lives. Despite its radical
departure from the conventional narrative form and the slightness of
its story,
Trop belle pour toi
manages to be one of cinema's most delicately heartrending poems to the
destructive power of an amorous infatuation.
Like Buñuel before him, Blier is not afraid to abolish the
boundary that separates reality and imagination, and also to dispense
with the linear narrative form. Past and present overlap and
become intertwined with the daydreams of the protagonists, to the
extent that we lose sight of where real-life ends and fantasy takes
over.
Scenes that appear to take place in the real world are
punctuated by unreal (even surreal) theatrical devices - characters
talking to camera, telling us what is about to happen in the story, or
re-enacting an incident that has already taken place. The most
obvious Buñuel reference is the dinner party sequence, which is
inter-cut with a wedding banquet in order to underscore the brutal
consequences of the extra-marital affair whilst reminding us of the
transient nature of romantic love. Even though the film flits
between past and present, reality and dreams with scant regard for
narrative logic, it does so seamlessly; far from appearing disjointed
or confused, the film has an extraordinary coherence, an impression
that is reinforced by Schubert's ever-present music, which emphasises
and sustains the relentless melancholia of the piece.
Gérard Depardieu's fifth collaboration with Bertrand Blier is
his most successful and it is doubtful that the actor ever gave a finer
performance than the one he offers here. Depardieu's style of
acting often has an unreal quality that sometimes jars in his cinema
portrayals, but here it is perfectly in tune with the semi-theatrical
style of the film. The actor's masculine physique and magnetic
male charisma are both belied by a very noticeable feminine sensitivity
which makes his character appear totally exposed, utterly vulnerable in
this film.
It is the two female protagonists - magnificently
portrayed by Josiane Balasko and Carole Bouquet - who are in the
driving seat, propelling the ill-fated love triangle to its inevitable
tragic conclusion. Depardieu plays the victim so perfectly that
he retains our sympathy, even when he is going off on one of his
anti-Schubert rants. A man who hates Schubert is clearly sick.
As is typical of Blier, the female roles are crudely inverted, so that
it is the dowdy frump (Balasko) who becomes the object of desire,
whilst the glamorous beauty (Bouquet) is the rejected wife. The
treachery of surface impressions is a theme that recurs in Blier's
anti-bourgeois, non-conformist cinema, and
Trop belle pour toi is one of those
rare films in which interior beauty, rather than its meretricious
external cousin, provides the force that unleashes the whirlwinds of
desire. Blier's nuanced and sympathetic treatment of his two
female characters went some way to challenging the popular view at the
time that he was a misogynistic filmmaker. Balasko has
never been so well-served by a script, and has perhaps never looked so
alluring, whilst Bouquet's appeal goes far beyond the merely decorative.
Trop belle pour toi represents
a highpoint in Bertrand Blier's career. Not only was it an
immense critical success, it was also the most commercially successful
French film of the year, attracting an audience of just over two
million. It took the Grand Jury Prize at the 1989 Cannes Film
Festival and was nominated for eleven Césars, winning awards in
five categories: Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress (Carole
Bouquet), Best Writing and Best Editing. Whilst it may not be the
most daring of Blier's films,
Trop
belle pour toi is a masterpiece of originality and understated
subversion, possibly the director's greatest film, certainly one of his
most accesible. The film's immense popularity powerfully refutes
the notion that cinema experimentation and mainstream success are
mutually exclusive.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Bertrand Blier film:
Merci la vie (1991)