Céline Sciamma’s Portrait
of a Lady on Fire may be described by some as a feminist film that tells a
tale of four women characters in 18th century France devoid of any
significant male characters, and made by a female director and a female
cinematographer. At the end of this
remarkable film, you tend to discount the female element. You are stunned by
the sophisticated quality of cinema the film offers that makes you discount the
overwhelming female gender quotient.
The following two citations of awards bestowed on Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire amply describe
the worth of the film.
"The Gold Hugo for Best Film goes to Portrait of a Lady on Fire by Céline Sciamma. The film portrays not only the exuberance of falling in love and the all-consuming nature that is love, but also the beauty of women's solidarity and the attempt to fit in a world that rarely seems to be made for them. The strength of the filmmaking combined with amazing acting, photography, and music set the jury on fire."
(Citation for the Best Film Award at Chicago International Film Festival.)
"This is a work, which excels in its audio-visual storytelling. Channelled through a strong female voice, it is at once narratively compelling and aesthetically striking. The film transports us to an age even more firmly in the grip of men than our own, to tell the tale of a handful of women. We follow their fascinating and deeply moving story, as they find intimacy and succour in one another, and a way to live out their dreams of freedom and fulfilment, to satisfy the longing to be a complete human being. In keeping with the best of period drama, our winner speaks to timeless human themes in a rich and stylistically self-assured visual register. With elegance, sophistication and courage, the film explores how love and vitality can - at least momentarily - throw off the shackles of an oppressive social order. Exquisite acting performances and cinematography, combined with a soupcon of mythological symbolism, add up to a work of serious artistic merit."
(Norwegian film critics award citation.)
Héloïse (Adèle Haenel) is an enigma in the early parts of the film, not suicidal but enjoying her freedom to run to the edge of the sea after her long years in the nunnery |
Sciamma’s original tale of Portrait of a Lady on Fire is of a female painter Marianne (Noémie
Merlant) contracted by a countess (Valeria Golino) to paint a portrait of her
second daughter Héloïse (Adèle Haenel) on an island in Brittany, France. The
portrait is intended to be a wedding gift for Héloïse’s impending marriage to a
wealthy man in Milan, who was earlier meant to marry Héloïse’s sister who suddenly
died before the marriage could take place. Héloïse, we learn, was recently
brought by her mother to the island from a nunnery where she was educated by the
nuns. Héloïse, we further learn as the film progresses, is not looking forward
to the prospect of her impending marriage and has deliberately disfigured an
earlier portrait of her done by another painter for her impending wedding and
has subsequently become a recluse with only Sophie (Luàna Bajrami), the maid,
as her regular contact. Therefore, the countess briefs her newly hired painter
Marianne that she has to paint her daughter Héloïse’s portrait without letting
her know that her portrait is being painted and without revealing that Marianne is actually an artist commissioned
to paint her portrait and not a mere hired companion for Héloïse, the official excuse for
her presence on the island. Sciamma’s screenplay, in the early stages, focuses
on Marianne’s intense creativity as a portrait painter in capturing the
features of her subject first in her memory only to paint the portrait in
secret, which she does in the absence of her subject. Héloïse. in turn. is surprised why Marianne is
looking at her so attentively. The
entire process is cleverly captured on film by lady cinematographer Claire
Mathon. In this process, director and
screenwriter Sciamma and cinematographer Mathon make the viewer fall in love
with the duo on screen, with minimal dialogue spoken between the two
characters. Sciamma and Mathon are the true “painters” in the film!
Marianne (Noémie Merlant) paints the portrait of Héloïse from memory of the details she found while staring at her |
The minimal dialogue in the film’s script can be assessed by
the fact that Héloïse’s name in the film is revealed only halfway into the
film. Early in the film, as Marianne is transported by boat to the island her
crate of canvas sheets falls into the sea and Marianne jumps into the sea to
retrieve it. Initially the viewer would tend to consider it as Sciamma’s design
to introduce and develop Marianne’s character. On deeper reflection, Sciamma’s
script and direction add another aspect to that scene: the fact that no male
person on the boat bothered to jump into the sea to retrieve the floating crate.
Having introduced the psychological development of interest
between Marianne and Héloïse, Sciamma moves on to introduce the physical and,
ultimately, to the emotional interest that develops between the two ladies with
time. A key element used by Sciamma to aid this development is music, carefully
but sparingly used. Héloïse, in the nunnery, had been exposed to choir singing
and organ music. Little else. Marianne introduces Héloïse to harpsichord and
Vivaldi’s compositions. Music is used in
key sequences with elan. During the bonfire sequence, when Héloïse’s dress
catches fire literally and figuratively, the women around the bonfire sing a
cappella song. The final sequence in the film and definitely strongest in the
entire film is that of the married Héloïse listening to Vivaldi’s second concert “Summer” in his famous four
part concerti composition The Four
Seasons. One can anticipate that over time that the ending will count as
one of the most evocative film endings in the history of film, combining the
effects of good scriptwriting, camerawork, direction and performances of the
key actors without a word spoken.
The stares for a professional cause that kick off a vibrant relationship |
The fire is real, but the fire in the film's title is metaphorical. Cinematographer Claire Mathon captures the rare moment as the painter Marianne will recall the magical moment |
Sciamma’s intelligent script suggests parallels with the
mythological tale of Orpheus using music to lure his wife Eurydice back from
the dead (the nether world of Hades) with a condition made by the gods that the
Orpheus does not look at his wife. In the film Portrait of a Lady on Fire, the married Héloïse does not appear to
look at Marianne while listening to a Vivaldi concert, music that Marianne
had made Héloïse appreciate prior to her
marriage.
Héloïse discovering new aspects of life from Marianne: music. love, painted images, impending marriage,, |
There is a sub-plot of the maid Sophie finding out she is
pregnant out of wedlock and the subsequent secret abortion conducted by
Marianne and Héloïse, when abortion was illegal in the 18th century
France. The role of the countess
stresses another typical type of strong-willed woman in those times in
France. Portrait of a Lady on Fire uses the four female characters
developed and presented by a predominantly women crew, each of the four
characters contrasting and complementing the other. Whether one likes the
subject of Portrait of a Lady on Fire is
personal choice but most viewers would appreciate the high quality of
filmmaking on display. It is a film that
distantly recalls Peter Greenaway’s 1982 film The Draughtsman’s Contract.
Trust and love blossoms between painter and subject |
The countess (Valeria Golino) (facing camera) presents the typical 18th century lady, a lesser developed character of the quartet |
Céline Sciamma’s ability as an original script-writer and
director brings her in the august company of two other top-notch contemporary
female directors: Claire Denis from France (Beau Travail and L’intrus)
and Anne Fontaine from Luxembourg (Dry
Cleaning). The entire trio have consistently made remarkable films
independent of each other.
P.S. Portrait of a Lady on Fire
is one of the author’s top 20 films of 2019. The film won the Best Screenplay award at the Cannes Film Festival; the Gold
Hugo Award for the best feature film at the Chicago International Film
Festival; the Rare Pearl award at the
Denver International Film Festival; the Best European Screenwriter Award at the
European Film Awards; Art Cinema Award at the Hamburg Film Festival: and the
Felix Award for the best fiction film at the Rio de Janeiro International Film
Festival. Claire Denis’ film L’intrus (The Intruder) (2004) has been reviewed on
this blog earlier.
No comments:
Post a Comment