Reviews of Les dames du Bois de Boulogne
Displaying all 3 reviews
moonmaster9000
25Jul09
Robert Bresson’s second feature film, Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne, was for me at once both greater and lesser than his more celebrated (and less conventional) films. Made in 1945, it was the last of his films to feature a cast of all-professional actors, and though the emotions exhibited were noticeably muted compared to the overwrought Hollywood fare of the times, the overall effect is like that of a slow simmer, an undercurrent of tension, instead of the automaton approach he elicited from the “models” in his later works.
‘Les Dames,’ taken from Diderot’s Jacques le fataliste, weaves a cautionary tale about a woman’s scorn. Rich, decadent, and beautiful Hélène learns that her cynical boyfriend Jean no longer loves her. Early on in the film, she opens up to him, pretending to have lost her feelings for him and pleading for deliverance from her guilt, thereby coaxing his own admission. Agreeing to remain friends, Hélène winds an elaborate trap, enticing him to first fall in love with and then to try to marry a women who, unbeknownst to him, has a notorious past.
Bresson’s adaptation (co-written with Jean Cocteau) feels perfectly at home in his spiritual universe, a universe filled with pain and suffering – and redemption. When it was released, many critics received it poorly, unable to believe in a story set in the present yet predicated on century-old mores. Within a matter of years, however, the film obtained cult-status, and is still shown to this day in art-house theaters around the world.
Working with professional actors, I felt like I was witnessing the missing half of Bresson’s vision, the passionate yin to his austere yang. But slowly I realized that I was also standing on the edge of an unbridged abyss. On this side stood a world with potential for visible connections, for emotional outbursts of love, hate. But Bresson left this world, crossing the abyss and occasionally radioing back bizarre new picture-scapes, lands where dispassionate decapitations, rape, donkey beatings, and other spiritual non-sequiter were the norm. Neither world makes sense without the other – yet neither can these worlds be bridged.
Last Word: Fascinating, engaging, though at times decidedly un-Bresson, ‘Les Dames’ merits appreciation for all that the auteur was able to accomplish within the studio system.
- Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
Howard Fritzson
12Jun09
I love Maria Casares. In both of her most famous film performances. (She was a noted stage actress.) First, in this film and later, in ORPHEUS she simmers with rage, lust, dark thoughts. She must have been a hot lover for Albert Camus. I have read a remark about her “tragedienne’s temperament” and the way she can make a five syllable word out of a one syllable word. Not knowing French, I can’t tell if this is true of her film performances, but I know that she has one of the most intimidating stares in film history.
asuraf
3Feb09
Fans of Robert Bresson’s spiritual minimalist masterpieces like “Pickpocket”, “Lancelot of the Lake”, and “Mouchette” are often perplexed when they see this glossy early melodrama, about love and betrayal in Parisian high society, which bears very few of the stylistic hallmarks of the better known films, beginning just two years later with “Diary of a Country Priest”. A wickedly conniving Maria Casares stars as a woman spurned by her long time lover, who tells her one day, though complacent, he no longer loves her; to get her revenge, she orchestrates for the man to meet, and instantly fall in love with a disgraced dancer (Elina Labourdette) who has fallen on hard times because of scandal due to her various love affairs. Bresson’s mixture of high studio lighting, especially on Casares, to suggest her evil plans, and outdoor location shooting is a harbinger of his later films, but everything else is purely of the classic French studio system, including the use of famous film stars, and a script with dialogue by Jean Cocteau; it may not be “Bressonian” as we know it, but it’s juicy, and beautiful, and belongs alongside better films of its kind by Renoir, Carne, Duvivier, and Becker.
- Currently 3.0/5 Stars.