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Friday, May 31, 1996
Léon Morin, Priest
Melville made Léon Morin, prêtre in a conscious attempt to reach a wider audience than the New Wave cineastes at his fatherly knee. Still, taking two actors recently associated with the New Wave-Belmondo of Breathless and Emmanuelle Riva of Hiroshima, mon amour-he created a film that has more ties to Bresson and his own (pre) Bressonian The Silence of the Sea than to the freewheeling Bob-le-Flambeur. Casting the boyish Belmondo as a priest with a missionary bent is one of the intriguing ambiguities of this film. Riva is a Communist drawn to the cleric and, through desire, into an attempt at religious conversion. The spiritual desolation wrought by the Occupation has rarely been so sensitively delineated as in this portrait of a town suddenly exposed to its underlying social disarray. The vigor of Melville's filmmaking, from crane shots and quick pans to caressing close-ups of obscure objects of desire, gives this contemplative film a thrilling beauty.
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