Summary
A bored housewife, Anne, witnesses the murder of a
woman by her boyfriend in a bar-café. By chance, she meets
a man, Chauvin, a labourer, who shares her fascination with the murder.
As the two discuss the history of the tragic couple and speculate on the
circumstances which led to the killing, Anne finds herself drawn to Chauvin.
Anne’s longing for her new friend intensifies and, in the end, becomes
too much for Chauvin. One night, Anne and Chauvin arrange a final
meeting in the bar where the murder which brought them together took place.
Review
A beautifully lyrical but sombre piece of cinema, Moderato
Cantabile is an excellent example of the French new wave of the early
1960s. It is a moving and eloquent study of the psychology of a bored,
well-off housewife, trapped in a life of routine and predictability, whilst
longing for some danger to give her life meaning. We are on the same
ground as Louis Malle's earlier film, Les
Amants, in which Jeanne Moreau again played the role of the bored
housewife. However, Moderato Cantabile gets further beneath
the skin of the woman and the result is slightly more interesting and satisfying
than Malle's film.
The
pairing of Jeanne Moreau and Jean-Paul Belmondo is a masterstroke.
Moreau’s tragic wistfulness plays perfectly off Belmondo’s sullen, contemplative
persona. There is something deeply tragic in an attractive woman
who places herself in the hands of a taciturn stranger, who, for all we
know might be capable of murdering her.
Jeanne
Moreau plays the part with such conviction and solemnity that, in that
scene where the camera is frozen on her face for a full ten seconds we
almost seem to glimpse her soul. In the final moments of the film
when the housewife’s fantasies are extinguished and that soul is wrenched
asunder we are left gasping. Little surprise that she scooped
the best actress award at Cannes for this performance.
The
other striking thing about this film is the photography, which is impressive
in its own right, but triumphs because it captures the mood of the subject
so brilliantly. Few films have used the wide-screen aspect to such
great effect. Almost every scene is a wide panorama, either filled
with detail or disturbingly empty. The location shots of the port
and the woods are haunting in their bleakness and seem to provide a resounding
echo for the dialogue between the characters Anne and Chauvin.
© James Travers 2000
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