Film Review
Not content with being one of France's busiest and most highly regarded actors
of stage and screen, Pierre Blanchar turned his hand to directing films in
the early 1940s, and proved himself to be a very capable filmmaker.
After adapting Ivan Turgenev's play
A Month in the Country as
Secrets (1943), Blanchar directed
only one further film,
Un seul amour, which was loosely based on Honoré
de Balzac's novella
La Grande Bretèche. It was the kind
of lavish period melodrama that was hugely popular in France during the war
years, although the film's macabre denouement (more likely to be found in
an Edgar Allan Poe story than a work by Balzac) lends it an unusually bleak
and sinister feel.
With his implacable aristocratic bearing, Pierre Blanchar was eminently well
suited for the lead role, an ambiguous character with more than a hint of
the sadist about him judging by the horrific treatment he metes out to his
supposedly beloved wife in the film's final twenty minutes. The coldness
of Blanchar's portrayal is exacerbated to a terrifying degree by the warmth
and apparent fragility of the film's heroine, played with spellbinding charm
by Micheline Presle at her most engaging and photogenic. That there
is an intense bond of love between these two characters we do no doubt, but
the cruelty that Blanchar inflicts on Presle when her past indiscretions
become apparent leaves a decidedly sour after-taste and renders the film's
fairytale coda slightly baffling, if not altogether absurd.
A more obvious failing is a somewhat unfocused screenplay which has the narrative
hopping backwards and forwards between two time-frames, with too much time
spent with a set of uninteresting characters in the rambling framing story
trying to piece together a mystery of the past. The film's impressive
production values and gripping central performances from Presle and Blanchar
overwhelmingly make up for this deficiency, however, and whilst
Un seul
amour hardly deserves to be considered a classic, it is a singularly
unusual and unsettling film for its time. You can't help suspecting
that it is meant to be an allegory of some kind...
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1860s France, a couple who have recently acquired a dilapidated country
house in Vendôme discover within it the secret of a passionate love
affair that once took a macabre and deadly turn. It all began fifty
years previously, when the wealthy landowner Gérard de Clergue fell
madly in love with the beautiful young dancer Clara Biondi. In the
course of the ensuing romance, Gérard remains blissfully ignorant
of the fact that Clara had a previous lover, James de Poulay. Not long
after the couple have married and moved into Gérard's ample country
residence, de Poulay shows up with the intention of blackmailing Clara.
When her husband returns to the house unexpectedly, Clara forces de Poulay
to hide himself in a cupboard. Discomforted by a draught in his living
room, Gérard orders his servant to brick up the cupboard immediately,
knowing full well that his wife's former lover is on the other side of the
door...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.