Film Review
Un dimanche à la campagne
is one of director Bertrand Tavernier's most personal and introspective
films, an understated yet intensely engaging reflection on mortality
and the trauma of growing old. It is a sensitively crafted
adaptation of the novella
Monsieur
Ladmiral va bientôt mourir by Pierre Bost, who is best
known for his work as a screenwriter. In collaboration with Jean
Aurenche, Bost scripted such classics of French cinema as
Le Diable au corps (1946),
L'Auberge
rouge (1951) and
Jeux interdits (1952), and
later worked on two of Tavernier's early films:
L'Horloger de Saint-Paul (1974)
and
Le Juge et l'assassin
(1976). The film won Tavernier the Best Director award at Cannes
in 1984, and was nominated for eight Césars, winning in the
categories of Best Actress (Sabine Azéma), Best Cinematography
and Best Adapted Screenplay.
What makes this such a
particularly memorable film is the remarkably
poignant and true-to-life central performance by 73-year-old Louis
Ducreux, who plays the lead character, the aged Monsieur Ladmiral, with
exquisite charm and subtlety. A distinguished stage actor,
Ducreux made surprisingly few cinema appearances and this was to be his only
major screen role; he would later have a smaller part in Tavernier's
subsequent
Daddy Nostalgie
(1990), just before his death in 1992. Ducreux's engaging
portrayal of an old man finding himself ever detached from the world around him
evokes memories of Carlo Battisti's legendary performance in Vittorio
De Sica's similarly themed masterpiece
Umberto
D. (1952). The impressive supporting cast includes Sabine
Azéma and Michel Aumont, who are perfectly chosen to play Ladmiral's chalk and
cheese offspring. Tavernier would later cast Azéma for the
female lead
in his acclaimed epic
La Vie et rien d'autre (1989),
thereby establishing her as one of French cinema's leading actresses.
A mesmerising little film that
lacks the blockbuster scale and pretensions of Tavernier's grander
works,
Un dimanche à la
campagne is
content merely to reflect on the one great tragedy of human existence,
that of growing old and having to accept one's mortality. Whilst
the elderly Monsieur Ladmiral knows that he is loved by his children and
grandchildren, he knows also that he is separated from them by a gulf
of understanding. He belongs to the past; he is a faded relic that has no
place in the modern world of 1912. He cannot understand what his nearest
and dearest say to him, nor can he make himself understood by them.
Ladmiral's evident physical isolation is compounded by a growing sense
of emotional estrangement. His one consolation is his art, which
allows him to conjure up the shadow if not the substance of life as his
own time-worn existence slowly crumbles to dust.
Monsieur Ladmiral's two grown-up children are complete opposites: a son
who is a successful businessman and family man, and a frivolous
daughter who gads about like a mad thing pursued by sadistic
hornets. Although Ladmiral loves them equally, he clearly has a
greater affinity for his daughter Irène. She may be
egoistical and visits him only infrequently, but she has that quality
of vitality and spontaneity that her brother lacks. It is the
same quality that Ladmiral tries to bring to his paintings as he seeks
to capture the fleeting impressions of life at its most vibrant and
evanescent. Travernier's cinematographer Bruno de Keyzer manages
to reproduce the same impressionistic style in his photography, the
sun-dappled garden setting and crowded country guingette instantly
bringing to mind the work of the great impressionist painters Renoir,
Cézanne and Monet. The film's languorous pace has
the character of a sultry summer afternoon, hours of leisurely ennui
punctured by moments of intense emotion. Yet beyond the
comforting impression of the happy family reunion there is a deeper
sense of melancholia and regret. One old man's life is nearing
its end, and as he faces up to his own imminent demise he sees his own
descendents thriving like summer blossoms, ignorant of the cold and
cruel winter that awaits them.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Bertrand Tavernier film:
La Vie et rien d'autre (1989)
Film Synopsis
Monsieur Ladmiral is an ageing painter who lives alone in his large
country house, cared for by his loyal housekeeper
Mercédès. Every Sunday, his middle-aged son
Gonzague comes to visit him with his wife and three young
children. Late one summer in 1912, the sober family get-together
is disturbed by the unexpected arrival of Ladmiral's free-spirited
daughter Irène...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.