Films francais
    We have moved to: www.filmsdefrance.com     
 
Le Miroir à deux faces
1958 Drama
 
Credits
  • Director: André Cayatte
  • Script: André Cayatte, Jean Meckert, Gérard Oury, Denis Perret
  • Photo: Christian Matras
  • Music: Louiguy
  • Cast: Michèle Morgan (Marie-José Vauzange-Tardivet), Bourvil (Pierre Tardivet), Ivan Desny (Gérard Durieu), Gérard Oury (Dr. Bosc), Georgette Anys (Madame benoit), Julien Carette (M. Benoit), Georges Chamarat (Vauzanges), Elisabeth Manet (Véronique Vauzange), Jane Marken (Madame vauzanges), Marcel Pérès (Le bistrot), Sylvie (Mme. Tardivet mère)
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Runtime: 96 min
  • Aka: The Mirror Has Two Faces
 
 
 
Summary
Deciding it is time for him to marry, schoolmaster Pierre Tardivet places an ad in the newspaper for his ideal mate.  Of the many replies he receives, he selects Marie-Josée Vauzange, a middle-aged spinster who, whilst gentle and cultivated, is far from being an object of beauty.  Ten years after their marriage, Pierre is involved in a car accident.  By way of compensation, plastic surgeon Dr Bosc offers to treat Pierre’s injuries in his private clinic.  Pierre accepts but, once recovered, he rejects Bosc’s supplementary gift to give his wife a new face.  Without Pierre knowing, Marie-Josée allows Bosc to perform the operation, which transforms her into a beautiful woman.  When she returns home, Pierre refuses to accept her as his wife…


Review
Whilst he is perhaps best known for his social dramas revolving around the deficiencies of the French legal system, director André Cayatte also made a number of more conventional melodramas, of which Le Miroir à deux faces is one of his best.  Cayatte’s restrained yet effective direction makes this a compelling and poignant piece of psychological drama, in which the crumbling relationship of an ill-matched couple is portrayed with great compassion, but also a touch of ruthlessness.  Far from being a cosy, comfortable film, Le Miroir à deux faces is about as pessimistic as Cayatte can get, although he tells his story with more humanity and subtlety than he is usually credited with.

The film affords Bourvil one of his few, and best, dramatic roles.  Better known as a comic actor, his performance in this film demonstrates that he is equally capable of playing tough, unsympathetic parts, and many spectators may be surprised by this unfamiliar persona.  Michèle Morgan is even less recognisable in the first half of the film, although this is the result of some very effective make-up work which completely changes her appearance.  The actress turns in another captivating performance, conveying the sense of a bird who, having spent most of its life trapped in a small cage, finally discovers freedom.  Bourvil and Morgan work together very well, the former’s down-to-Earth simplicity contrasting with the latter’s otherworldly nobility.  They would subsequently appear together in the 1960 film Fortunat , directed by Alex Joffé.

Gérard Oury appears in the film in a significant supporting role (the slightly sinister Dr Bosc), which is probably his most memorable film part.  He also co-wrote the screenplay, which encouraged him to embark on a career as a film director.  The success of his films in the 1960s made him the most successful and famous mainstream director in France of his day.  The star of Le Miroir à deux, Michèle Morgan, would become Oury’s real-life partner for the rest of his life - a happy ending that you wouldn't find in an André Cayatte film.

© James Travers 2006

 



Buy this film: