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Les dames du Bois de Boulogne

 
Movies:

Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne

  • Director: Robert Bresson
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Period Film, Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Out For Revenge
  • Main Cast: Maria Casarés, Paul Bernard, Elina Labourdette, Lucienne Bogaert, Jean Marchat
  • Release Year: 1945
  • Country: FR
  • Run Time: 84 minutes

Plot

Though this interesting film was among many responsible for the critical success of French autuer Robert Bresson, it was by no means a commercial success. Slightly different than his other films, director Bresson utilized the contrasty photography of Philippe Agostini (Sylvie et le Fantome, Monde du Silence) and chose professional actors Paul Bernard (Lumiere D'ete), Maria Casares (Enfants du Paradis), and Elina Labourdette (Shanghai Drama) to star rather than non-professionals. With dialogue written by writer/filmmaker Jean Cocteau, Les Dames du Bois du Boulogne was adapted to the screen by Bresson from an interpolated anecdote in Diderot's Jacques Le Fatalist. Casares plays Helene, a passionate but self-controlled woman who is seething after her lover Jean (Bernard) confesses he no longer loves her. Driven by revenge, Helene engineers a plan to attack Jean via Agnes (Labourdette), the woman he truly loves, and Anges' mother (Lucienne Bogaert). ~ Kristie Hassen, All Movie Guide

Review

One of Robert Bresson's most incandescent works, this early film also marks the teaming of two of France's most personal and idiosyncratic artists: Robert Bresson and Jean Cocteau. Cocteau (whose 1949 film Orpheus mesmerized post-World War II audiences), in addition to his numerous other accomplishments, wrote the dialogue for Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne, loosely based on Denis Diderot's short story Jacques le Fataliste et Son Maître. Elina Labourdette plays Agnès, a young woman who has been forced into a life of prostitution in wartime Vichy, France, in order to support herself and her ailing mother (Lucienne Bogaert). At the same time, Hélène (the serpentine Maria Casarés) is breaking up with her longtime lover, Jean (Paul Bernard), and, feeling jilted by him, concocts an elaborate plot for revenge. Contacting Agnès and her mother, Helene offers to take over their debts, move them out of the brothel they call home, and set them up in a sleek, modern apartment, with no strings attached. We discover too late Hélène's true motives; she is doing all of this so that Jean will "accidentally" meet Agnès, fall in love with her, marry her, and then become the subject of public ridicule because of Agnès' past. All of this goes off with clockwork precision, but Jean, when confronted with the monstrousness of Hélène's treachery, shakes off his bourgeois prudishness, embraces Agnès despite her fall from grace, and the film ends on a note of hope and Bressonian redemption.

Cocteau and Bresson were uneasy collaborators; Cocteau's brilliant, incisive dialogue displeased the reticent Bresson, as did the theatricality of the actors. Before long, Bresson would quit working with actors altogether, and create some of his most compelling films using non-professionals, or as he called them, "models," for the leading roles. But in this film the young filmmaker and his scenarist combine to make a telling commentary on the vicissitudes of living in occupied Paris; indeed, Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne is one of the key works of the French Resistance. Working at night on unheated sets (you can see the actors' breath condensing in front of their faces in several scenes), Cocteau and Bresson crafted a brutal parable about the realities of living life under the Nazis in occupied France -- one had the illusion of freedom, but in fact, the leash was very short. Filled with sumptuous sets by Max Douy and a superbly moving score by the great Jean-Jacques Grünenwald, Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne is one of the most subtle masterpieces of classical French cinema. ~ Wheeler Winston Dixon, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Maria Casarés - Helene
  • Paul Bernard - Jean
  • Elina Labourdette - Agnes
  • Lucienne Bogaert - Mme. D
  • Jean Marchat - Jacques
Yvette Etievant - Chambermaid; Bernard Lajarrige

Credit

Robert Clavel - Art Director, Max Douy - Art Director, Robert Bresson - Director, Jean Feyte - Editor, Jean-Jacques Grünenwald - Composer (Music Score), Philippe Agostini - Cinematographer, Marcel Weiss - Cinematographer, Raoul Ploquin - Producer, Robert Bresson - Screenwriter, Jean Cocteau - Screenwriter, Denis Diderot - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

Dangerous Liaisons; Les Liaisons Dangereuses 1960; Valmont; Hamlet; Dangerous Liaisons
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Wikipedia: Les dames du Bois de Boulogne
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Les dames du Bois de Boulogne
Directed by Robert Bresson
Produced by Raoul Ploquin
Written by Robert Bresson
Jean Cocteau (dialogue)
Starring Paul Bernard
María Casares
Elina Labourdette
Lucienne Bogaert
Release date(s) Flag of France 21 September 1945
Flag of the United States 3 April 1964
Flag of the United Kingdom June, 1964
Running time 84 min
Language French

Les dames du Bois de Boulogne (1945) is a French film directed by Robert Bresson. It is a modern adaptation of a section of Diderot's Jacques le fataliste (1796), telling the story of a man who is tricked into marrying a former prostitute. The title means "the ladies of the Bois de Boulogne", a park in Paris.

Les Dames was Bresson's second feature. It is also his last film to feature a cast entirely composed of professional actors.[1]

Plot

Hélène and Jean have pledged their love to each other, but are not engaged to marry. Their love affair allows dalliances with others, but they have promised to put each other first above all others. Hélène has been warned by a friend that Jean's love for her has cooled and fears this is correct. She tricks him into confessing, by pretending her own feelings for him have cooled to a friendship. She hides her shock and dismay when he enthusiastically accepts her as now just a friend instead of a lover. After he leaves her apartment, it is clear that she is devastated. But instead of mourning her love, she decides to exact a cruel revenge on him.

Young Agnès is a cabaret dancer. Her ambition was to become a ballerina at the Opera, but hard times have fallen on her, and in order to support herself and her mother, she has resorted to dancing in nightclubs and earning money as a prostitute. Hélène, in a pretense of compassion, offers to pay off Agnès' mother's debts and move them into an apartment, allowing Agnès to quit the nightlife.

Hélène sets a trap using Agnès to entice Jean into falling in love with the young woman. She assures him that Agnes and her mother are of an “impeccable” background. He is already smitten as soon as he sees Agnes in the Bois de Boulogne, and makes no attempt to learn anything about her, instead relying on Helene's false information.

Hélène about to be driven home by Jean after he admits he was tempted to leave her at the park and take Agnès and her mother instead.

Agnès suspects they're being manipulated by Hélène but feels powerless to escape the trap. Jean does not relent in his advances, and finally Agnès agrees to marry him. Hélène advises her not to breathe a word to Jean about her past until after they are wed, and insists to Jean that he allow her to plan a lavish wedding for the two of them.

Immediately after the ceremony, Hélène first hints to Jean that something is amiss. Agnès had assumed that Hélène had already told Jean the truth, and learning she was tricked, falls in a faint. Jean confronts Hélène, who now divulges triumphantly that she maneuvered him into the marriage, and that all of the guests know the truth. Jean, filled with shame, bewilderment and rage, drives off leaving his new bride, still in an unconscious state.

Later that evening, Jean returns. Agnès' mother warns that the girl's heart is weak and that she could die. Jean walks into the room, stone-faced. Agnès, barely conscious, whispers that she hopes he will forgive her, but it's clear that she will free him by giving up her life. Agnès sighs, and appears to stop breathing. Jean is filled with love for her and begs her to be strong and to hang on to life. Although weak, she hears him and her faint smile assures him that she will live.

References

  1. ^ Roy Armes, French Cinema, New York: Secker & Warburg (1985): 116. "In the 1950s Bresson was to renounce the use of professional actors, but here he obtains excellent performances from his principal actresses."

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