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Murmur of the Heart

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Wikipedia article




'Murmur of the Heart' is a 1971 French comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Louis Malle. The film stars Lea Massari, Benot Ferreux and Daniel Glin. Written as Malle's semi-autobiography, the film tells a coming of age story about a 14-year-old boy (Ferreux) growing up in bourgeois surroundings in post-World War II Dijon, France, with a complex relationship with his Italian mother (Massari).

The film was screened at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival and was a box office success in France. In the United States, it received positive reviews and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

Plot



Laurent Chevalier is a nearly 15-year-old boy living in Dijon in 1954 who loves jazz, always receives the highest grades in his class and who opposes the First Indochina War. He has an unloving father Charles, who is a gynecologist, an affectionate Italian mother, Clara, and two older brothers, Thomas and Marc. Thomas and Marc are notorious pranksters, while Laurent engages in taboos such as shoplifting and masturbation. Laurent also witnesses Clara meeting with a lover, and upset with the adultery, runs to tell Charles. Charles, busy with his practice, angrily turns him away.

One night, Thomas and Marc take Laurent to a brothel, where Laurent loses his virginity to a prostitute, Freda, before they are disrupted by his drunken brothers. Upset, Laurent leaves on a scouting trip, where he catches scarlet fever and is left with a heart murmur. Laurent is bedridden and cared for and entertained by Clara and their maid Augusta. Laurent's teacher at his Catholic school suggests that Laurent's illness has matured him, so that he has made progress in his studies, and urges Clara to treat him more like an adult.

As Laurent requires treatment at a sanatorium, he and Clara check into a hotel. Due to an error by Charles' secretary Solange, the hotel books both Clara and Laurent into a single room, and given that the hotel is completely full, no additional room is available. Laurent takes interest in two young girls at the hotel, Hlne and Daphne, and also spies on his mother in the bathtub. Though Laurent pursues Hlne, Hlne says she is not ready for sex; Laurent accuses her of being a lesbian. Clara temporarily leaves with her lover, but comes back distraught after their breakup, and is comforted by her son. After a night of heavy drinking on Bastille Day, Laurent and Clara have sex. Clara tells him afterwards that this incest will not be repeated, but that they should not look back on it with remorse. Afterwards, Laurent leaves their room, and after unsuccessfully trying to seduce Hlne, spends the night with Daphne.

Cast



Production



Director Louis Malle wrote 'Murmur of the Heart' in part as an autobiography. As Malle said, "My passion for jazz, my curiosity about literature, the tyranny of my two elder brothers, how they introduced me to sex this is pretty close to home." Malle also suffered from a heart murmur and shared a hotel room with his mother during treatment. Aside from this, the film is a work of fiction, and takes place later than Malle's true childhood. The humorous and earthy Italian mother is also a fictional character, based more on a friend's mother than his own. Malle asserted in interviews that the incest, in particular, is fictional. He claimed that in writing the script, he had no intention to include incest, but ended up doing so as he explored an intense mother-son relationship.

Upon submitting his screenplay, the National Center of Cinematography raised objections to the perverse erotic scenes. Malle was surprised by the response. With the Censorship Board denying funding, the film was financed with the help of Mariane Film, a French subsidiary of Paramount Pictures. Given his love of jazz, and the fact that Laurent steals a Charlie Parker album at the beginning of the film, Malle used Parker's music for the film score.

Talking about the infamous incest scene, Lea Massari said, "We shot that scene last and it was a great concern throughout the entire shoot. On the last day Malle said to me, 'do what you want, if it comes out well we'll keep it, if not we'll do as I say.' I acted on instinct, loading the fact that the woman was drunk, and the scene stayed as is.

Release



In France, the film had 2,652,870 admissions. It was screened at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1971 and also played at the New York Film Festival in October 1971.

On its re-release in the United States in 1989, it grossed US$1,160,784. In Region 1, The Criterion Collection released the film on DVD in 2006, along with Malle's other films 'Lacombe, Lucien' and 'Au Revoir les Enfants'.

Reception



Critical reception

received positive reviews for her performance.

Roger Ebert gave the film a four-star review, comparing it favourably to 'The 400 Blows' (1959), and writes that with the incest, Malle "takes the most highly charged subject matter you can imagine, and mutes it into simple affection." Judith Crist, writing for 'New York', praised the "remarkable" performances from Lea Massari, Benot Ferreux and Daniel Glin. Richard Schickel, writing for 'Life', said he had a "strange enthusiasm" for the film, which he felt demonstrated "taste, charm and the most winning sentiment." 'Variety' staff complimented Ferreux and Massari's performances. Roger Greenspun wrote a negative opinion in 'The New York Times', claiming "it isn't very good" and "that it could probably have been made with as much distinction by any of those directors, all equally anonymous, who specialize in urban romantic comedy (or tragedy) of a sophistication that is supposed to be peculiarly French." John Simon wrote Murmur of the Heart treated incest charmingly but unsatisfactorily.

In 1989, Desson Howe wrote in 'The Washington Post' that the film maintained its "fresh intelligence and delicacy" and "Malle's world of sarcastic, upper-middle-class brats seems to be 'Murmur's most enduring creation." In 1990, Richard Stengel gave the film an A in 'Entertainment Weekly', writing "Almost everything about this coming-of-age story rings true, and Malle avoids any heavy-handed explanations of family behavior." Critic Pauline Kael called Massari "superb." In his '2002 Movie & Video Guide', Leonard Maltin gives the film three and a half stars and calls it a "fresh, intelligent, affectionately comic tale."

US director Wes Anderson cited 'Murmur of the Heart' as an influence, saying he loved the characters Laurent and Clara. Regarding the incest, he says, "The stuff between him and the mother feels more kind of romantic almost- but also taboo and scary in a way, which makes it even more seductive." US director Noah Baumbach also named the film as an influence. Rotten Tomatoes counted 16 favourable reviews out of 17 for a score of 94%.

Accolades

'Murmur of the Heart' was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the 1973 Academy Awards. It was also in competition, in the French part of the official selection, at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival.

References




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