42 | Sight&Sound | November 2019
f Maurice Pialat never had the same
impact outside the country of his birth
as he did within it, perhaps that is partly
down to his mission – to show France nue, naked,
with all its prejudices, sexual imbalance and
class tensions laid out before his camera, with
no apology or direct criticism. When Cahiers du
cinéma in 1998 convened a meeting of young
French filmmakers to discuss the influence of the
New Wave, the conversation soon turned to Pialat,
with the majority asserting that he was far more
significant in their formation. While his refusal
to concede to cliché and the sentimental, as well
as his boldness in tackling unpredictable subjects,
is perfectly evident in the work of such overt
disciples as Cédric Kahn and Arnaud Desplechin,
it’s much harder to define exactly where Pialat
himself springs from – and in what tradition
in French cinema he takes his place, if any.
Any attempt to assess Pialat’s cinema is
necessarily a catalogue of contradictions.
In generational terms, he should rightly be
considered a member of the French New Wave,
but he stood apart from them and only shot his
first feature, L’Enfance nue (Naked Childhood), in
1968, when he was 43. His films were challenging
in their brutal subject matter and elliptical
narratives, and extremely autobiographical, yet
he was capable of reaching a large audience, and
moving them with an underlying tenderness. He
was open to working in genre – the cop thriller
(Police, 1985), the literary adaptation (Under the
Sun of Satan/Sous le soleil de Satan, 1987, from a
Georges Bernanos novel), the biopic (Van Gogh,
1991) – but they emerged with all the hallmarks
of his more personal projects. In their directness
and rough edges his films often appeared to be
largely improvised, but were actually in the
main very closely scripted. And while he enjoyed
working with non-professionals, he was happy to
cast established stars – Gérard Depardieu, Isabelle
Huppert, Sophie Marceau, Jacques Dutronc – and
succeeded in moulding them to his vision.
Born in the centre of France, the Auvergne,
Pialat spent his formative years in the Parisian
suburbs, the latter experience reflected in the
bleak alternative view of the city provided by
his early short documentary L’Amour existe (Love
Exists, 1960). The film that made the greatest
impression on him as a boy was Jean Renoir’s La
Bête humaine (1938), a contemporary adaptation
of Emile Zola’s novel dominated by working-
class figures steeped in the soot and oil of the
railways. This was very much la France profonde,
the near-mythical world of rural life outside the
big cities, up there on the big screen. It’s easy to
see Jean Gabin, the star of Renoir’s film, as a model
actor for Pialat – a solid man of the people, totally
believable in a fictional context and unaffected
in his speech and manner. Although Pialat was
very grudging in his praise of other filmmakers
(while at the same time denying his own worth),
he held to Renoir and Marcel Carné as the two
masters of classic French cinema. Of the two, he
inclined more to Renoir’s brand of realism – a
natural way of acting, a freedom to react to the
conditions of the shoot, an open camera style
in natural locations – than Carné’s supremely
crafted world filled with poetic dialogue and
gestures, and usually filmed on elaborate sets.
Pialat himself tried on various hats through
the 1950s and 60s, making observational
documentaries and quirky shorts borrowing
from silent cinema and surrealism. L’Enfance
nue grew out of a documentary project about
the fostering of children. He had researched the
subject deeply in the same town – Lens, in the
north of France – where he made the film. As he
would later express it, “While shooting L’Enfance
nue, I was thinking about Repas de bébé.” He was
referring to Baby’s Breakfast, a short made by the
Lumière brothers in 1895, a static record of an
amusing, everyday event, but one staged for the
camera. And this sense of the lens as observer,
transforming a reality into something potentially
miraculous, remained central to his method,
and his approach to whatever happened in
front of it. This placed him some distance from
the famous New Wave directors, who in their
backgrounds as film critics had a deeply self-
conscious relationship with cinema – Godard
deconstructing the medium, Truffaut celebrating
literary tropes, Rivette reflecting on the theatre
and life, and so on. If Pialat was close to anyone
from that generation, it was the now rather
forgotten Jacques Rozier, whose Adieu Philippine
(1962) was a wry tale of young men and women
playing amorous games, filmed in real locations
with an unknown cast. But Rozier’s film freely
employs post-synchronised dialogue and music-
driven sequences, which were far from Pialat’s
preference for direct sound, however rough, and
his very sparse use of music, usually heard
from onscreen gramophones or performers.
MAURICE
PIALAT
AND THE NEW FRENCH REALISM
Deep Focus
Maurice Pialat’s stark, unsentimental films left a mark on French cinema that arguably outweighs even that of the
nouvelle vague. A director who thrived on conflict, he captured moments of searing emotional power on screen,
inspiring a generation of French directors and actors. As Sight & Sound brings the first complete Pialat retrospective
in the UK to BFI Southbank, alongside a programme of films by the Pialat-influenced young French filmmakers of
the 1990s, David Thompson explores the pugnacious realist’s career, Ginette Vincendeau assesses his impact on 90s
new realism, and James Bell talks to Olivier Assayas about a master who only received his full due late in life.
This sense of the lens as observer,
transforming a reality into
something potentially miraculous,
remained central to Pialat’s method
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VERSION Deep Focus, 1