अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंIn 1917, the First World War is raging. Julien is from Luxembourg, so instead of having to go to war he studies piano in Paris. One day his friend Jacques, also a musician and now a fighter ... सभी पढ़ेंIn 1917, the First World War is raging. Julien is from Luxembourg, so instead of having to go to war he studies piano in Paris. One day his friend Jacques, also a musician and now a fighter pilot on the front, invites him to spend a few days in his family's empty house in Bray. T... सभी पढ़ेंIn 1917, the First World War is raging. Julien is from Luxembourg, so instead of having to go to war he studies piano in Paris. One day his friend Jacques, also a musician and now a fighter pilot on the front, invites him to spend a few days in his family's empty house in Bray. The housekeeper, a beautiful but mute woman lets Julien in, but his friend is late and he i... सभी पढ़ें
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The protagonist, a brilliant but poor Luxembourgish pianist, in France during the First World War, receives a letter from a friend who is in the front, an aristocratic composer, with whom he collaborated musically and seems to be very attached.
In that letter the composer invites him to his unoccupied mansion in the country, since he is on leave and wants to meet him there.
From the moment the protagonist begins his journey to the meeting, everything seems to be brilliantly orchestrated to influence the protagonist's mood and thoughts, beginning with his initial encounter on the train with an enigmatic woman (is she similar with the woman in the painting which appears afterwards?) and a military man on leave.
But it's when he gets to the mansion that the atmosphere becomes rare. The friend is not there, and in his absence he only finds a beautiful maid, who does not seem very communicative but is very interested in the protagonist staying the night. Obviously, she has received very precise instructions from the absent friend, about the food and drink that she has to serve him, and about how to behave (misterious, romantic, elusive, somewhat tragic); and in the house itself, the protagonist cannot help but paying attention to objects, photographs, scores that make him recall past meetings between friends.
We are drawing several conclusions from these memories: the aristocratic friend is definitely more mundane and practical, and has a relationship with a girl (Bulle Ogier) who, like the protagonist, is clearly of humble origin but far from misterious or sophisticated). This relationship does not seem very serious. The protagonist is, however, an introvert, at times with almost childlike innocence, and not much given to worldly pleasures or fleeting love affairs. In fact, there is a scene in which the friend makes fun of this attitude (his pride, his withdrawal, his lack of interest in women), and another scene in which, quite transparently, he encourages the protagonist to get closer to his girlfriend, proposal by the way rejected. There is even a scene in which the friend's mother, an unfriendly aristocrat who feels somewhat abandoned by her son, reproaches him for furtive encounters in the country mansion (precisely in the mansion where he is now spending the night), encounters that the protagonist categorically denies.
That is why the events on this lonely night begin to be so suspicious, it almost seems that the friend's note was a lure and that the protagonist is being the object of a well-intentioned trap, a setup to create in the refined and romantic protagonist a mood that leads him to surrender himself to the arms of this most beautiful servant, who hardly speaks, who seems totally schooled on what to do, how to behave, who secretly shows her concern, but who insists suspiciously that the protagonist does not leave the house until he is forced to spend the night.
The next day the pianist leaves the house and goes to the station, but a story in the newspaper makes him decide to return home.
The film is worth, above all, for the ambiguous and mysterious atmosphere, for the hypnotic beauty of its quite and delicate images, for the deliberate rhythm of that wandering in that kind of cold, enigmatic and welcoming prison in which the protagonist has been forced to remain. Highly recommended, a small but very remarkable film.
Because the tone is so restrained, the acting so diminished in expression, the story never really engages the viewer. Mathieu Carriere was never my idea of a romantic lead (he was thinner than David Bowie), and Anna Karina, trying to start her career again after the breakup with Godard, just does the minimum, with no help from Delvaux. There are hints of a Jules et Jim type of triangle, with pixyish Bulle Ogier as the girl who would interrupt the passionate friendship of Carriere and van Hool, but it isn't fully developed. Delvaux is just too fixated on those beautiful interiors, and nothing, not even the carnage of the war--it's 1917--can get him out of them.
A not very accessible auteur,Delvaux is an acquired taste."Un Soir ...Un Train" is one of my all time favorites but "Rendez-Vous à Bray" well...Bulle Ogier and Anna Karina are the kind of French actresses I just cannot stand.I must say that,as Karina has few things to do here,she is quite good.
Delvaux knows how to create a mysterious disturbing atmosphere.Take the scene on the train: the woman's looks are enough to generate a strange feeling.No need to argue about "why ain't you a soldier whereas I'm fighting to put an end to all wars?" .
His technique is now really running well: the flashbacks almost always come from things the hero (Matthieu Carrière)spots in the mansion where he is waiting for a friend.Not that the trick is new: in their 1939 masterpiece,"Le Jour Se Lève" ,Marcel Carné and Jacques Prévert already pioneered the process (the teddy bear notably).But these ceaseless flashbacks - which made "Un Soir Un Train" even more impressive- really mesmerize the viewer who does not know where he stands anymore,in dream or reality ,in an old memory or in a movie...
The movie in the movie was already present in "Un Soir Un Train" : the scene when Montand and his companions enter the odd tiny movie theater and watch a weird film is arguably my favorite in that movie.In "Rendez-Vous à Bray" ,Delvaux uses some Louis Feuillade's footage :"Fantomas " was one of the big blockbusters of the WW1 years in France ;today some critics talk about "Feuillade's brainwashing" .
Delvaux seems to love popular literature :after the show,in the cafe ,Bulle Ogier tells us Souvestre-Allain's hero's tales in lavish detail (the director switches smartly from Sonia Danidov's madness to Karina's wandering in the corridors with skill);in "Un Soir ,un train" there was a short hint at Jean Ray's "Harry Dickson" .
Based on a Julien Gracq short story which I have not read,"Rendez-vous à Bray " is visually a splendor.But whereas "Un Soir Un Train" was really,in its last sequences, very moving ,"Rendez-vous à Bray" hardly touched my imagination the way his former work had done.
क्या आपको पता है
- कनेक्शनFeatured in De man die zijn haar kort liet knippen archieven (2005)
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