Film Review
One of Claude Chabrol's most underrated films,
Une partie de plaisir is a
surprising departure for a director who is best known for his
Hitchcock-style psychological thrillers. The film offers a
portrait of the male-female relationship that is both incisive and
disturbing, evoking something of the work of the other great directors
of the French New Wave, such as Eric Rohmer and Jacques Rivette, but
with an added twist of cruel perversity. The script was written
by Paul Gégauff, who worked on several of Chabrol's films and
who plays the male lead in this film, opposite his ex-wife,
Danièle - something which adds a frisson of realism to the
proceedings.
The film is essentially an ironic study on the transience of romantic
love. The main character, Philippe, resembles an artist who is
constantly striving for perfection in his love life, and is incapable
of seeing that his ambition is unattainable. Rather than accept
the minor flaws in his relationship with his partner, Ester, he makes a
series of moves that will quickly destroy it. Not only does he
underestimate Ester's resilience and ability to find love elsewhere, he
also fails to recognise in himself the dark passions that will consume
him as his scheme backfires. For Philippe, the ideal woman is
immutable, like the waxworks he admires in the Grévin museum,
someone he can possess absolutely, and understand implicitly. In
his quest for a sterile perfection, he destroys a living love, as
thoughtlessly as a child who plucks flowers, never realising for one
moment that for a thing to be unchanging it must first die.
Une partie de plaisir may not
be a thriller, but it is a chilling and compelling work, one of Claude
Chabrol's bleakest films, albeit with a touch of his trademark
anti-bourgeois humour. The realist approach adopted by the
director and Paul Gégauff's intense naturalistic performance
lend the film greater impact, making this one of French cinema's most
unsettling depictions of conjugal conflict and obsession.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Claude Chabrol film:
Alice ou la dernière fugue (1977)
Film Synopsis
Philippe and Ester appear to be the perfect couple. They
have been together for eight years and, although they have never
married, they have a six year old daughter who is testament to the
solidity of their relationship. Fearful that complacency may one
day sour their feelings for one another, Philippe suggests that they
should both be free to indulge in extra-marital affairs. With
some reluctance, Ester agrees, but Philippe is unhappy with the man she
chooses, an intellectual named Habib. His increasing jealousy
drives Ester away from him and he reacts by hastily marrying an English
woman, Sylvia. Even this fails to bring Philippe peace of mind
and he resolves to win Ester back, at any price...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.