The Widow Couderc. Because I love Granier-Deferre, and I could spend hours and hours listening to his interviews without tiring.
It's not a very eventful movie. More like a description of french rural society (and society at large) during the 30s. With, as everywhere in Europe, the rampant racism and antisemitism that would cristalize in Germany, as the ordinary everyday nazis (as the very fine people who'd elect the rightmost political option within the current overton window) were everywhere. Fascism was rising there as it does today, with the same smug semi-respectability.
That's one aspect of the background. The other is just petty rural family infighting. The plot is simply about a young escapee (Delon) finding shelter in the house of an old widow (Signoret), and how their relationships evolve. It's implied that the widower used to sleep with her very old father in law, before that younger man's arrival. The latter does sleep with her and somehow loves her, but (because it's a french film of the 60s), he also has an affair with a teenager who herself has a fatherless baby and an easy reputation. There's a couple scenes between Delon's character and that teeaeger, which are supposed to be tender and erotic. Were they at the time ? They just feel creepy and pedophiliac nowadays, strongly unerotic. It's a cultural shift that concerns a lot of movies of that era.
So, barely any character is truly likeable. Delon's character isn't, due to this affair. The teenage girl isn't (she's showed being gratuitously, childishly cruel to a rabbit). Signoret's titular character is the most dignified, yet still pathetic. The rest of the family is just awful - greedy, heartless, violent, manipulative, and of course avid readers of L'Action Française (one of the journals which, at the time, had the same function and the same kind of headlines as today's Fox News) - and way more nasty than the Delon/Signoret couple, which leads the spectator to root for those two. But the gloomy tone makes us expect the inevitable tragedy.
At the basis, it's a Simenon novel, so you can expect a psychological focus on characters, interactions and old unresolved conflicts. I haven't read any Simenon ever, but from the adaptations, I always prefer his bleak little stories that stand on their own legs to those that require the pretext of a Maigret whodunit - because yes, those are always a pretext for what Simenon is best known for, the depiction of lost everyday people, in everyday ordinary drama pushed to tragic conclusions. But for Maigret fans, this would feel like revealed character backgrounds without the police investigation framing.
Anyway, eerie atmosphere. Pessimistic outlook on people (but the authors and the spectators know how History would soon justify it). Very humane character studies, top notch acting. A decent Sarde soundtrack (that irritates me by sounding too close to another music I can't identify). All that for a very basic story that simply carries you. But again, a movie from a different era, both in form and content. Nice, but not quite the strength of other Granier-Deferre like Le Train ou L'Ami de Vincent.
Looking forward to resuming the exploration of his work.