Film Review
After the worldwide success of his Oscar-winning hit
Un homme et une femme
(1966) Claude Lelouch was showered with offers of work in Hollywood, but he
resisted the lure of Tinsel Town and instead continued to plough his own
idiosyncratic path in France, his profile happily raised by what is now considered
one of the most iconic French films of the 1960s. Lelouch followed
his dazzling portrayal of a couple falling in love with a somewhat gloomier
account of a married couple falling out of love.
Vivre pour vivre
would seem to be the mirror image of
Un homme et une femme, but
it is probably better to regard these as two halves of a dyptich that both
celebrates and laments the stinging transience of romantic love.
Vivre
pour vivre proved to be another critical success for Lelouch - it not
only won the Grand Prix du Cinéma Français (the percursor to
the Best Film César) but was also honoured with the Golden Globe for
the Best Foreign Film of 1967.
As with his previous film, Lelouch was blessed with his principal casting
for
Vivre pour vivre, with Yves Montand and Annie Girardot as perfectly
suited for the leads as Jean-Louis Trintignant and Anouk Aimée had
been in the preceding, less sombre film. It was whilst making the film
that Lelouch fell head-over-in-heels in love with his lead actress, and this
is more than evident in the way he films Girardot, not as the butch feminist
that she would tend towards in later years, but as a sensitive woman endowed
with qualities that transcend mere beauty - charm, understanding, warmth
and intelligence. So successfully does Lelouch frame Girardot as the
ideal woman that her co-star Yves Montand cannot help but resemble the egoistical
male fool - the husband who is too easily tempted by youth and beauty to
realise the prize he risks losing, a woman of greater worth. Lelouch's
shameless adoration of Girardot was to continue on their next film together,
Un homme qui me plaît
(1969).
Vivre pour vivre sees Lelouch moving on to deeper territory and it
is one of his darker, more ironic films, although its appeal is somewhat
dented by the fact that it lacks the artistic and narrative coherence of
Un homme et une femme. The haphazard inclusion of newsreel footage
which constantly hammers home man's inhumanity to man seems somewhat arbitrary
and a needless distraction from the central narrative, although, as in some
of the director's subsequent films, these grim, brutally inserted splinters
of reality remind us of the unthinking brutality that lies within us all, and
the chaos on which our lives are founded. It is the patchwork quilt
feel of the film - less grandiose and self-conscious than in Lelouch's later,
more overblown offerings - that makes
Vivre pour vivre such a vivid
and arresting movie experience. In some scenes, Lelouch dispenses with
dialogue altogether - the images alone tell us all that needs to be said,
and if they fall short Francis Lai's music amply fills the gap.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Lelouch film:
Un homme qui me plaît (1969)
Film Synopsis
Robert Collombs is a well-known French television reporter whose love life
is as eventful as his globe-trotting career. Despite being happily married
to Catherine, he takes advantage of the freedom offered by his job to carry
on numerous affairs without his wife's knowledge. As soon as one liaison
with an actress, Mireille, finishes, another begins - this time with a young
American model named Candice. The latter agrees to accompany Robert
on his next assignment to Kenya, to make a report about mercenaries.
After this, Robert joins his wife in Amsterdam, both hoping to reawaken their
former passion. This second honeymoon is derailed by Candice's unexpected
appearance in the city. Of course, Robert cannot resist meeting up
with the model, and when his wife sees through his lies he has no choice
but to admit his infidelity. Catherine and her husband part on bad
terms. Just before setting out for his next assignment in Vietnam,
Robert decides to end his affair with Candice and is surprised by her willingness
to let him go. On his return from Vietnam, where he is detained in
prison for several months, Robert finds that Catherine has made a new life
for herself - a life that no longer has any place for him.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.