Summary
After having being discharged from the army for lapses of discipline, a
20-year old Antoine Doinel seems ill-equipped to cope with civilian life.
He first gets a job as a night watchman in a hotel, but is soon given
the sack. He is then recruited as a private detective by an agency,
his first assignment being to trail a magician with a secret love
life. Having bungled that case, Antoine is assigned to a shoe-shop at the
request of its owner, Monsieur Tabard, who is paranoid that everyone hates him,
including his wife. So preoccupied is he with his job that
Antoine has little time for his girlfriend, Christine. Things come
to a head when Antoine discovers he is also falling in love with Madame
Tabard. And who is the myserious stranger who is trailing
Christine...?
Review
Six years after Antoine Doinel appeared in the Antoine
et Colette segment of the compendium film
L’Amour à vingt
ans, François Truffaut felt the time was right to resurrect
his famous alter ego, who first saw the light of day in Les Quatre
cents
coups.
By
this time, Jean-Pierre Léaud, the young actor who played Antoine
in these two earlier films, had established himself as an actor in
France,
most notably for his appearance in Jean-Luc Godard’s film La
Chinoise.
By the time Baisers volés was made, Léaud had
developed
his own personality – a mixture of unpredictable rebel, loveable
good-for-nothing
and womanising scamp – which was perfectly in tune with Truffaut’s
vision
of the Doinel character.
In Baisers volés, Truffaut continues to use Doinel to relate incidents
from his own life, most notably his terrible experiences in the
army. In 1951, after having absconded without leave, a 19 year old
François
Truffaut was arrested for desertion. He spent several gruelling
months
in a German prison before being offered a dishonourable discharge.
In stark contrast to the elegiac poignancy of Les Quatres cents coups and
the emotional intensity of Jules et Jim, Baisers
volés
is a much lighter film, a sentimental romantic comedy about a young man finding
his feet (and constantly tripping up) in an adult world. The
film's title comes from a line in Charles Trenet's song Que reste-il de
nos amours? which is also used as the film's signature tune.
This is a film which also manages to capture the mood of the time it was
made.
The year 1968 has a special significance in the recent history of
France.
The student demonstrations and general strikes that year shook the de
Gaulle
government to its foundations and resulted in a burgeoning youth
culture.
Although Truffaut sympathised with these events, he never directly
reflected
them in his films, unlike his contemporaries. Despite that, there
is an air of quiet subversion which runs through Baisers
volés
(and
indeed the subsequent two Doinel films).
One
major political event which marked Truffaut at the time he was making
this
film was the decision by the French government to remove Henri Langlois
from his post as director of the Cinémathèque
Française.
Truffaut leant his support to the outcry from well-known actors and
directors
to have Langlois re-instated, and this meant he had less time than he
planned
to direct this film. Truffaut dedicated Baisers
volés
to
Langlois, and indeed the opening shot takes us right up to the doors of
the Musée du cinéma in Paris, appropriately closed for
business.
Truffaut
believed that Baisers volés would fail at the box
office because of the distraction caused by the Langlois affair. He was
wrong. This proved to be his most successful film in France since
Les Quatre cents coups, and it was a surprising success in the United
States.
© James Travers 2001
See also:
The life of François Truffaut
Les 400 coups
Tirez sur le pianiste
Jules et Jim
Farenheit 451
Le Dernier métro
Buy films by François Truffaut
More about the French New Wave
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