The Mother and the Whore | |
Director: | Jean Eustache |
Producer: | Vincent Malle Bob Rafelson |
Starring: | Bernadette Lafont Jean-Pierre Léaud Françoise Lebrun |
Cinematography: | Pierre Lhomme |
Editing: | Denise de Casabianca Jean Eustache |
Runtime: | 219 min |
Country: | France |
Language: | French |
Budget: | 700,000 francs |
Gross: | $44,050[1] |
The Mother and the Whore (French: La maman et la putain) is a 1973 French film directed by Jean Eustache and starring Jean-Pierre Léaud, Bernadette Lafont and Françoise Lebrun. An examination of the relationships between three characters in a love triangle, it was Eustache's first feature film and is considered his masterpiece. Eustache wrote the screenplay drawing inspiration from his own relationships, and shot the film from May to July 1972.
The film screened at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Grand Prix. With some divided initial critical reaction, it has been championed by later critics and filmmakers.
Alexandre is an unemployed young intellectual, perhaps a journalist, living a rudderless life in Paris. Subtly but totally self-absorbed, Alexandre spends most of his days lecturing his companions about political and philosophical topics, among them his opinions on contemporary films, such as The Working Class Goes to Heaven, and his memories of the Mai 68 protests. He lives with his lover Marie, who works at a dress store and responds to his continuous apathy for her with angry invective that masks her strong feelings for him. When Alexandre attempts to persuade an ex-girlfriend, Gilberte, to marry him, Gilberte opts instead to marry another man. Alexandre makes his way to the popular Les Deux Magots café and gets the number of a woman leaving. The two eventually go on a date. Her name is Veronika, a Polish French anesthesia nurse who lives at the Hôpital Laennec. Priding herself on her promiscuity and her status as a liberated woman, Veronika makes advances on Alexandre, eventually seducing him.
Marie immediately sees through Alexandre's clumsy attempts to hide his affair, treating him with a gradually increasing fury that only abates when they themselves have sex. When Marie goes on a business trip to London, Alexandre first beds Veronika in his apartment, then sleeps with another friend of his who had earlier expressed the desire to cheat on her husband. After each tryst, Alexandre lectures the women on various topics, while playing classical and pop music on his record player.
Eventually, Veronika visits the apartment of her own accord while drunk. She arrives to find Alexandre and Marie nude in bed, and levies insults upon all three of them. They quickly begin a ménage à trois, sleeping in the same bed. Marie and Veronika both claim to enjoy the resulting polyamorous relationship, but each one secretly vies for Alexandre's undivided affections. After Alexandre reacts poorly to Marie inviting one of her own ex-lovers to a party, the relationship quickly breaks down. Veronika scathingly criticizes his attitude towards women at the Café Flore, accusing him of not loving her, or anyone, the way she loves him. Later, Marie attempts to commit suicide with sleeping pills, though Alexandre quickly stops her. This causes Veronika to break down, delivering a lengthy monologue about the way that sexually active women are perceived as "whores" and rejecting some of her "liberated" political stances. Veronika tells him that she thinks she might be pregnant with his baby.
Alexandre decides to take Veronika back to her apartment at the hospital, leaving Marie to cry alone in the apartment. Alexandre drops Veronika off, but then storms back into her apartment and asks her to marry him. At this, Veronika breaks down crying and laughing, and claims that she is going to throw up. Feeling possible morning sickness from her pregnancy, she tells Alexandre that, if he really wants to help her, he can fetch a dish for her to throw up in. Alexandre complies and then sits down on the floor, overwhelmed and distraught.
In 1972 Eustache had begun to doubt his career in films and contemplated quitting the business. He told a reporter from Le Nouvel Observateur "If I knew what it was that I wanted, I wouldn't wake up in the morning to make films. I'd do nothing, I'd try to live without doing or producing anything." Soon afterwards he got a new idea for a film to make with his friends Jean-Pierre Léaud and Bernadette Lafont; he also brought in his ex-lover Françoise Lebrun who at that time was a literature student and had never acted before. Eustache was loaned money from friend Barbet Schroeder to spend three months writing the script, which was over three hundred pages. Although the film often seems to be highly improvised, every word of dialogue was written by Eustache.[2] The film was very autobiographical and was inspired by Eustache's various relationships, such as his then recent breakup with Françoise Lebrun and romantic relationships with Marinka Matuszewsk and Catherine Garnier. Many of the locations used in the film were places that Garnier had lived or worked. The character played by Jacques Renard was based on Eustache's friend Jean-Jacques Schuhl.[3] [4]
The film was shot between May 21 and July 11, 1972.[5] on a budget of 700,000 francs. Eustache called it a very hostile film, and it mostly consisted of dialogues and monologues about sex. Eustache says that the character Alexandre is "destroying [the three lead characters], but he is looking for it all along. After his voyage into madness and depression, he ends up alone. That's when I stop the film."[2] Filming locations included Les Deux Magots Café, the Café de Flore, the Café le Saint-Claude, the Laennec Hospital, the Blue Train restaurant and inside various apartments on the Rue de Vaugirard and Rue Vavin.[6] The film had no musical score and only used natural sounds and occasionally music played by the characters on phonographs, such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Edith Piaf, Marlene Dietrich and Deep Purple.[7]
Eustache described the film as a "narrative of certain seemingly innocuous acts. It could be the narrative of entirely different acts, in other places. What happens, the places where the action unfolds, have no importance...My subject is the way in which important actions situate themselves in a continuum of innocuous ones. It's the description of the normal course of events without the schematic abbreviation of cinematographic dramatization."[2]
Luc Béraud is assistant director on the movie.
The Mother and the Whore is considered Eustache's masterpiece, and was called the best film of the 1970s by Cahiers du cinéma. It won the Grand Prix of the Jury and the FIPRESCI prize at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival. The film created a scandal at the Cannes Film Festival, as many critics saw the film as immoral and obscene or, in the words of the broadsheet Le Figaro, "an insult to the nation", while Télé-7-Jours called it a "monument of boredom and a Himalaya of pretension".[2] On its initial run the film sold over 343,000 tickets in France.[8]
After gaining little public recognition despite receiving praise throughout the years from critics and directors, such as François Truffaut and other members of the French New Wave, Eustache became an overnight success and internationally famous after the film's Cannes premiere. He soon financed his next film. The critic Dan Yakir said that the film was "a rare instance in French cinema where the battle of the sexes is portrayed not from the male point of view alone". James Monaco called it, "one of the most significant French films of the 1970s". Jean-Louise Berthomé said, "I am not sure that La maman et la putain, with its romances of a poor young man of 1972, doesn't say something new." Pauline Kael praised the film, saying it reminded her of John Cassavetes in its ability "to put raw truth on the screen – including the boring and the trivial".[2] Jean-Louis Bory of Le Nouvel Observateur gave the film a negative review, calling it misogynistic and criticizing the characterization of Alexandre.[9]
The film's reputation has increased over time. In 1982, the literary magazine Les Nouvelles littéraires celebrated the tenth anniversary of the film by publishing a series of articles about it.[10]
It has been called one of the best films in French history by Jean-Michel Frodon[11] and Jean-Henri Roger.[12] Film director Olivier Assayas has especially praised the film and considers it an example of what to strive for in filmmaking.[13] It was ranked the second greatest French film of all time by a poll of filmmakers.[14] [15]
Andrew Johnston, writing in Time Out New York, described his experience of viewing the film:
After a 2016 retrospective screening at the French Institute Alliance Française, film critic Richard Brody effusively praised Eustache's sophisticated portrayal of characters whose "intimate disasters have the feel of epic clashes."[16] Further, he sees the film as Eustache's "comprehensive vision" of radical politics and the Sexual Revolution in post-1968 France – a stark, regretful, and suspicious vision that Brody terms "ferociously conservative".[16]
The film was adapted into a 1990 stage play by Jean-Louis Martinelli.[17] In 1996, the French rock band Diabologum utilized Veronika's monologue in a song titled "The Mom and the Whore" on their album #3. Vincent Dieutre's 2008 film ea2, 2e exercice d'admiration: Jean Eustache paid tribute to Veronika's monologue.