Max Ophüls had started his filmmaking career in Germany. He made a lot of films in France in the 30s. The next phase of his career took him to Hollywood. In 1950 he returned to France and made four final masterpieces, Madame de…, La Ronde, Lola Montès and Le Plaisir. They are among cinema’s greatest achievements.
It’s not difficult to see why he left Hollywood. He was not going to be able to make the wildly unconventional defiantly non-realistic movies he wanted to make in Hollywood. It’s not that Hollywood doesn’t have its own tradition of non-realist movies. The Busby Berkeley musicals, the Astaire-Rogers musicals, von Sternberg’s movies, all come to mind. But Ophüls had something quite different in mind - something much more European.
Ophüls steadfastly refused to film in colour until his final movie, Lola Montès. It’s easy to see why. Ophüls had a vision for cinema that could only work in black-and-white and in his 1950s movies he wanted to pursue that vision obsessively. In movies like La Ronde and Le Plaisir he created movies that made zero concessions to realism. These were uncompromisingly artificial movies but they were artificial in a cinematic rather than a stagey way. They are gorgeous movies. They have that particular glamour that can only be achieved in black-and-white.
In Le Plaisir (as La Ronde) we enter a slightly different world. It’s not quite a fairy tale world but it’s not the real world. It’s a world where charming amusing things can happen and the rules of everyday reality can be bent a little, or even ignored.
One of the other reasons Ophüls needed to lave Hollywood is that the movies he wanted to make were movies for grown-ups. Hollywood in the 50s was not ready for such movies.
Le Plaisir is a portmanteau film. It presents adaptations of three stories by Guy de Maupassant, all dealing in some manner with pleasure.
The first story, Le Masque, is very simple but with a slight off-kilter touch. The setting is an expensive, sophisticated and slightly naughty dance hall. An odd young man turns up. He is dressed as a dandy but he dances in a slightly clumsy manner and collapses. It is discovered that he is not a young man at all, but an old man. An old man determined not to renounce the pleasures of youth.
The second story, La Maison Tellier, takes place in a brothel. A very civilised well-run brothel. The madam, Madame Tellier, fusses over her girls like a mother hen. As becomes obvious when it closes for a day it is in fact the most vital social institution in the town. Without it there would be no social harmony.
It closes for a day so that the girls can attend the First Communion of Madame Tellier’s niece. For the girls it’s a holiday in the country. They have a lovely time in the sleepy little rural village but they’re happy to be back at work next day. They love working in the brothel.
You might think this story is going to contrast Sin and Innocence but the whores are as innocent and virtuous as the most innocent lass in the little rural village.
Le Modèle concerns an artist who discovers a new model. She inspires him. His career takes off. They fall in love. But the love affair does not prosper. There’s an interesting twist at the end.
Another reason Ophüls had to make these movies in France is that they have no single strong straightforward linear narrative. La Ronde has a circular narrative. The three stories in Le Plaisir are almost plotless. They evoke mood, they display the director’s mastery of gorgeous cinematic style, they offer some witty observations on life, love and pleasure.
There’s a bitter-sweet tone to all three stories. They don’t exactly have happy endings but they don’t have unhappy endings. Life goes. Like Ophüls’ camera, life just keeps moving. Ophüls isn’t cynical or moralistic. He is perhaps gently amused by human foibles. Even the old man in the first story isn’t seen as merely ridiculous or pathetic. He will keep pursuing pleasure until he finally drops dead. Perhaps that is not so very bad. Just as being a prostitute is not so very bad for the girls in the second story. Madame Tellier treats them with kindness and indulgence. Their customers are a good-natured lot. Perhaps one day they will decide to get married, but in the meantime they’re having a lot of fun.
Ophüls indulges himself in some of his favourite techiques. He loved shooting through windows and he loved tracking shots, and staircases and scenes that take place on two levels - that begin upstairs and then move downstairs. It’s a stunning virtuoso display.
An odd but entrancing movie. Highly recommended.
I've also reviewed Ophüls' La Ronde (1950) and Lola Montès (1955).