Louis Bunuel’s Belle
de Jour (1967) which is currently being revived at Film Forum (on the tails of a Michel Piccoli retrospective) is curiously lacking in mystery, over 50 years after its
release. Catherine Deneuve’s enigmatic allure (she’s really the Mona Lisa of
French Cinema and is beautiful without being sexual) overshadows the narrative and at times takes on a life of its
own. In fact, one of the qualities of the film itself that one notices from the
first frames is the pure beauty of the cinematography. Even the jarring scenes
of sado-masochistic sexual fantasy are set in plushly drawn buccolic settings that look like Barbizon school naturalist landscapes. And Bunuel’s mise-en-scene
gives the film a stately quality that’s as aloof as his star. Repression is the
subject and to a certain extent Deneuve as Severine, the housewife turned prostitute, is reprising her role in Polanski’s Repulsion (1965) where the emotional
deadness is belied by the onslaught of murderous imagery. Ultimately the film exudes little of the multivalent complexity of classics like Exterminating Angel (1962) and
The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972)
where Bunuel sublimely refines the choreography of the surrealist esthetic. Piccoli plays Henri Husson, a predatory aristocrat and Belle de Jour is a great
vehicle for his name brand coolness and insouciance. However, the film is curiously
one-dimensional and predictable, even as the line is crossed between fantasy (Severine is constantly reliving the same scenarios) and reality.
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