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Director
Robert Bresson
Stars Anne Wiazemsky, Walter Green, Francois Lafarge,
Jean-Claude Gilbert, Philippe Asselin, Nathalie Joyaut, Pierre Klossowski
Certificate
Running time 95 mins
Made France
1966
Robert
Bresson retrospective
ROBERT Bresson invites his audience to anticipate the balm of sentimentality.
Balthazar is a donkey. The children hug him and play with him. And
leave him. Time passes. Children grow up. They change. The donkey
is sold, moves away, is beaten, kicked and treated like a dog. He
escapes and comes back and for a moment is safe. The moment passes.
The little girl who had been his friend finds that life is full of
fear. There are boys who want to harm her. They want to take off her
clothes and kiss her. They want more. She is driven stupid by fear.
In "Au Hasard Balthazar" Bresson sets up a situation, only
to knock it down. There is no sentimentality. The donkey and the girl
are victims of male cruelty. The world is a dangerous and confusing
place, even more so in the country. The ideal of rural innocence is
given short shrift, or no shrift at all. The message is clear. Dumb
animals, like dumb girls, are anyone's. Love and compassion is fickle,
the only constant being graft.
Made in 1966, the film has an episodic structure. The acting appears
homegrown. What gives the film its strength is Bresson's refusal to
compromise truth for the sake of expedience. A donkey is a donkey
is not a soft toy. Despite that, Balthazar has genuine personality.
If he could speak, he would say, "The exploitation of working beasts
is a crime against animality." As for the girl, she doesn't know what
she wants.
The Wolf
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