Louis Malle comes
from a
rare breed of French film director who achieved a reputation as a great
director not just in his native France but internationally, and was not
afraid to embrace a wide range of subjects, some notoriously
controversial.
Malle was born in
1932 in
Thumeries, near to Lille in northern France, into a comfortable
bourgeois
family which had made a fortune in sugar production dating back to the
Napoleonic wars. In 1940, at the age of 12, he attended a
Catholic
boarding school near Paris (with his three brothers), a school which
was
sheltering Jewish pupils. The tragic events of this time are
documented
in Malle’s poignant 1987 film, Au Revoir les Enfants.
After the war,
Malle began
a degree course in political science at the Institut d'études
politiques
in Paris but, against his parents’ wishes, switched to a course on film
studies at the Institut des Hautes ètudes
Cinématographiques.
Almost immediately after that, he was recruited as a camera operator
for
the famous underwater explorer, Jacques-Yves Cousteau. He worked
as co-director on Costeau’s celebrated documentary film, Le Monde
du
silence in 1956, before working as an assistant for cult film
director
Robert Bresson.
The late 1950s
and early
1960s was an exciting and turbulent time for French cinema, with a
whole
host of young new directors finding immediate fame. One of these
New Wave directors was Louis Malle, who won instant recognition for his
first solo film as a director, L’Ascenseur pour l’échafaud (1958).
This film featured Jeanne Moreau, an actress who would become a
favourite
for the other New Wave directors (most notably François
Truffaut).
Jeanne Moreau
starrred in
Malle’s next film, Les Amants, a tender yet explicit depiction
of
a frustrated housewife’s desire for an extra-marital affair. The
film was both condemned and censored in the United States for its
extended
nude bedroom scenes, which were pretty erotic and daring for the time
(1959).
One
characteristic of Louis
Malle’s filmography is variety, arising from the director’s
determination
never to repeat himself. This is reflected most strongly in his
next
film, Zazie dans le métro (1960), which is a total
contrast
to his preceding films. The film is an energetic comic farce in
which
a young girl wreaks mayhem and havoc when her plan to travel on the
Paris
underground is thwarted by a strike.
Other successes
followed,
including Vie privée (1962), in which Brigitte Bardot
played
a virtual parody of her real-life persona and Le feu follet (1963),
a melancholic yet powerful study of a writer on the brink of killing
himself.
Having made Les
Voleurs in
1967, Malle admitted that he was tired of western film making and, in
1969,
he travelled to India, where he made two uncompromising documentaries
about
the poverty he saw in that country, Calcutta and L'Inde
Fantome.
After his return
to France,
Malle again courted controversy with his next film, Le Souffle au
Coeur,
an affectionate look at adolescence which included an incestuous
relationship
between a young woman and her teenage son. Malle’s second film
about
youth, Lacombe Lucien (1974), was no less controversial for
its
depiction of collaboration and childhood corruption in war-time France
during the Nazi occupation.
In the late
1970s, in search
of new inspiration and new territory, Louis Malle moved to the United
States,
where he would make half a dozen or so films, many of which won
critical
acclaim. These include Pretty Baby (1978), a story about
a
photographer and a pre-teenage prostitute (played by Brooke Shields,
her
first major role) and Atlantic City (1980), a curious romance
involving
a gangster and a younger woman.
The pinnacle of
Malle’s film
making career followed his return to France with Au revoir les
enfants (1987),
an autobiographical and intensely moving account of his war-time
schooldays
which won two Oscar nominations. This was followed by a
light-hearted
satirical comedy, Milou en Mai (1989), whose theme was
bourgeois
complacency during the 1968 demonstrations in Paris.
Malle’s final
film was Vanya
on 42nd Street (1994), a modest, unusual screen adaptation of
Chekov’s
play Uncle Vanya. He died the following year, on 23
November
1995 from a cancer-related illness. His film legacy shows a
virtually
unparallelled versatility which makes each one of his films unique,
including
entertaining comedies or thought-provoking dramas.
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