A Gentle Woman
A Gentle Woman, also titled A Gentle Creature, is a 1969 French drama film directed by Robert Bresson. It was Bresson's first film in Color [motion picture film|colour] and adapted from Fyodor Dostoevsky's 1876 short story "A Gentle Creature", moving the setting from 19th century Saint Petersburg to contemporary Paris.
Plot
The film opens with a young woman jumping to her death from the balcony of her apartment. Near her body, her husband Luc reflects on their marriage and the possible reasons for her suicide in a series of flashbacks.The couple first meets when she appears in Luc's pawnshop, selling belongings of her deceased family to finance her studies. Luc, who falls in love with her, finally manages to have her agree to his proposal. The marriage soon becomes strained, as Luc loves his dreamy, sensitive wife in a possessive, narcissistic way and tries to control her. When she starts going out in the afternoon regularly, he follows her and catches her offguard with another man, although it remains unclear if she is actually having an affair with him. The next morning, while Luc pretends to sleep, she takes his pistol and points it at his head, but refrains from shooting. Later, she falls ill. Luc apologises to her for his egotistical ways. Upon her recovery, she announces that she will try to be a loyal wife to him. While Luc is out, making arrangements for a vacation together, she commits suicide.
Cast
- Dominique Sanda as Elle, the woman
- Guy Frangin as Luc, the husband
- Jeanne Lobre as Anna, the maid
- Claude Ollier as the doctor
- as the nurse
Themes and style
Bresson relied solely on non-professional actors in A Gentle Woman, as he had in all his films except for his very early work. Dominique Sanda, a fashion model, made her screen debut in the film. Bresson, who had seen her picture in a fashion magazine, later explained that he chose her just as a result of her first voice call.
Bresson subsequently made another adaptation of Dostoevsky, his next film Four Nights of a Dreamer, based on White Nights.