Michel Deville(1931-2023)
- Director
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Michel Deville, a singular talent in French cinema. For, except during
a short period where he made two or three standard commercial films
(but that was to repay the debts of his own film company, due to the
defection of a business partner), Deville made pictures which, without
being too elitist, show a distinctive talent and personality. The
French director-writer-producer managed, all through a career that
spanned four decades and a half (from 1958 to 2005), to play a little
music of his own, never resting on his laurels but always trying
something new. And even if not all of his works are perfect, Deville's
taste for research makes the bulk of them at least interesting or
challenging. Born on 13 April 1931 in Boulogne-Billancourt, Michel Deville
graduated from high school and started studying literature but soon
branched out into movies. From 1951 to 1958, he learned the tricks of
his future trade by being assistant-director, mainly to
Henri Decoin, with whom he collaborated
thirteen times, notably on two important films,
The Truth About Bebe Donge (1952)
in 1951 and
Razzia (1955)
in 1952. After a false start in 1958
(A Bullet in the Gun Barrel (1958),
a run-of-the-mill crime flick, co-directed by
Charles Gérard), Deville succeeded in
making a name for himself two years later with his first true film
Ce soir ou jamais (1961). Film
critics did not miss out on the already gray-haired thirty-year-old
director as they immediately identified what made his specificity :
telling about love, seduction and feelings with subtle casualness and
quizzing cruelty. For the ten years that followed, working in tandem
with screenwriter Nina Companeez, Deville
made a series of allegedly "light-hearted" comedies, surely full of
charm and elegance but whose froth soon evaporates to reveal unexpected
gravity. The result can range from slightly superficial
(Girl's Apartment (1963),
The Bear and the Doll (1970))
to genuinely moving
(Adorable Liar (1962)) to
profoundly tragic
(The Diary of an Innocent Boy (1968),
a cruel tale about desire, love and the difficulty to love;
Raphaël ou le débauché (1971),
one of the most beautiful romantic films ever made). After ceasing his
collaboration with Companeez, Deville's films became darker and darker,
the director choosing to explore new forms of expression (narrative
deconstruction in
La femme en bleu (1973)); the
use of subjective camera and long sequence shots in
Dossier 51 (1978), etc.) as well
as new themes such as disillusionment, impossible dreams and
imagination as a way of survival. In the nineteen eighties Deville is
at the top of his art.
A Sweet Journey (1980),
Deep Water (1981),
Les capricieux (1984)
(TV movie) and
Death in a French Garden (1985)
examine the forms and variations of the loving feeling with consummate
mastery while Le paltoquet (1986)
and The Reader (1988) are two
fascinating forays into the territory of sheer imagination. As of 1990,
the director's art somewhat declined. Films like
Sweetheart (1992),
The Gods Must Be Daring (1997)
and The Art of Breaking Up (2005),
his final effort in 2005, more or less run on empty. But there are two
magnificent exceptions to that rule:
Aux petits bonheurs (1994)
(1993), the elegant bittersweet chronicle of love being threatened by
the coming of old age, and
La maladie de Sachs (1999)
(1999), a brilliant adaptation of
Martin Winckler's novel, consisting of
brief loosely related scenes, considered impossible to move onto the
screens. An excellent technician and theoretician, Deville also
established himself as a great actors director. All noticed how good he
was - not unlike George Cukor - at
directing women. Indeed Anna Karina,
Marina Vlady,
Michèle Morgan,
Brigitte Bardot,
Françoise Fabian,
Lea Massari, Anémone,
Miou-Miou,
Fanny Ardant,
Zabou Breitman and several others, did
shine before his loving camera. But this does not mean that their male
counterparts had anything to complain about when directed by him.
Thanks to Michel Deville Claude Rich,
Michel Piccoli,
Jean-Pierre Cassel,
Maurice Ronet,
Jean-Louis Trintignant,
Christophe Malavoy,
Richard Bohringer,
Claude Piéplu,
Jean Yanne,
Daniel Auteuil and many others naturally,
also found gratifying and memorable roles. When Michel Deville decided
to retire in 2005, he could do it with a clear conscience: he sure left
his mark on the seventh art and even if his name is a little forgotten
today, film historians will no doubt recognize his true worth some day
in the future.