Exploring the hurtfulness
of male caprice and the inner lives of complicated women with a novelistic
style, François Truffaut’s Two English
Girls is intelligent and meticulously constructed, though that can be said
of nearly all of Truffaut’s films. Yet Two
English Girls lacks the special fire that enlivens Truffaut’s chilly
storytelling approach in his best pictures. As he evolved, Truffaut largely
eschewed the guerilla-style filmmaking of his debut feature, The 400 Blows (1959), opting for polished
classicism that prioritized character and plot over bravura camerawork.
Whenever he got his teeth into a great story, this modality was effective,
helping viewers get lost in the thickets of provocative narratives. In projects
such as Two English Girls, the
mannered storytelling has a nullifying effect, as if the movie is a pretty
picture contained by a frame instead of something more immersive. One cannot
fault Two English Girls for its
acting, cinematography, or editing, et cetera, but the total experience is
weirdly bloodless.
Based on a novel by Henri-Pierre Roché, the picture opens in
turn-of-the-century Paris. Handsome young Claude Roc (Jean-Pierre Léaud) and
his mother receive a visitor from England, Ann Brown (Kate Markham). She’s
charming and lovely and worldly, so Claude happily accepts her invitation to
visit the Brown family in Wales. Once Claude arrives, Ann tries to forge a
romantic match between the Frenchman and Ann’s peculiar sister, Muriel (Stacey
Tendeter). Despite her eccentricities, Muriel makes her way into Claude’s
heart, but then Claude’s mother—fearing the possibility of an inappropriate
mate for her only son—demands the couple spend a year apart. The remainder of
the picture explores the impact of the separation, which has a liberating
effect on Claude but leads to heartbreak in the lives of the Brown sisters.
Two English Girls tells a small story,
and the idiosyncratic nuances that Truffaut inserts into the movie aren’t quite
enough to make the picture feel special. Scenes of Muriel talking directly to
the camera seem false, and the intrusive narration—spoken by Truffaut—drains
the movie of subtlety by providing overly detailed explanations for what people
feel and think during important scenes. It’s all very clinical, but not to any
notably meritorious end; simply letting the characters and story breathe would
have delivered something more intimate and resonant. Still, the technical
execution is up to Truffaut’s usual high standards, and the performances are
generally good. Léaud, best known for playing Truffaut’s cinematic alter ego in
the Antoine Doinel movies, offers an opaque screen presence, so it’s hard to
know whether we’re meant to perceive Claude as a cad, a naïf, or something in
between. Markham is alluring in a buttoned-up sort of way, and Tendeter is
fairly good at conveying quiet desperation. Alas, the moments when her
character’s repressed emotions burst forth underwhelm, like so many other
elements of this ultimately forgettable film.
Two English Girls: FUNKY
"One cannot fault Two English Girls for its acting, cinematography, or editing, et cetera ..."
ReplyDeleteOne more element that stands out for me is the music. A muddled film, for sure, but the score is magnificent. My favorite of the Truffaut/Georges Delerue collaborations.