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Mouchette (1967, Fr.)
In director Robert Bresson's bleak coming-of-age story
(his last black and white film) about a 14 year-old girl who was
often-abused and insulted, and demeaned:
- the film's brief pre-titles prologue - an unidentified
woman (Mouchette's terminally-ill mother) in a church bemoaned
and prayed about her coming death from a cancerous tumor and the
fate of her family: "What will become of them without me?
I can feel it in my breast. It's like a stone inside" - then
as the camera remained where she was sitting, she rose and departed,
to the sounds of Claudio Monteverdi’s Magnificat
- the introduction of the title character: pig-tailed
Mouchette (Nadine Nortier), the neglected pubescent daughter of the
mostly bedridden, dying mother (Marie Cardinal), and her mean peasant
father (Paul Hebert) (a contraband liquor smuggler) who lived in
a rural French village; a tearful Mouchette was left to feed, care
for, and change the diapers of the family's newborn - an often-crying
baby boy
- the miserable circumstances of her life - ill-fitting
clogs, her mistreatment at school by her teacher (Liliane Princet)
who grabbed her by the neck and shoved her toward a piano when she
refused to sing a hymn along with the others, with the apt words: "Hope!
Hope is dead"; the teacher held her head down above the piano
keyboard, hit a few keys, and ordered: "Sing!"
- Mouchette's ostracism and shunning by her classmates
(one called her "rat face"), and the cold regard and frequent
maligning by her abusive father (her father's method of discipline
was to shove her), and condemnation by the townsfolk (one shopkeeper
called her a "little slut")
- the scene of Mouchette's attempt to find friendship
with a boy whom she flirted with and happily met at the amusement-park
carnival during a bumper-cars ride, but shortly later when she approached
the boy at the shooting gallery, her father intervened and viciously
slapped her across the face, and led her away as he pushed her
At Amusement Park
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Bumper-Car Ride
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Friendship With Boy
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Slapped By Her Mean Father
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- the after-school sequence of Mouchette crouching
and hiding in a roadside ditch and flinging muddy dirt clods at
groups of bullying schoolgirls
- during a rainstorm, the sequence of Mouchette's visit
to the hut of alcoholic poacher Arsène (Jean-Claude Gilbert),
an epileptic who lived in the woods; he told her about a drunken
fight he just had with rival gameskeeper Mathieu (Jean Vimenet):
"I think I killed a man...This time I got him...He pitched forward.
His legs were thrashing. Furiously at first, then slower. Then they
stopped. He was face-down in the water. It turned red"; Mouchette
volunteered to provide Arsene with a false alibi in a cover-up, so
he could escape possible assault charges: "If I can be of help,
Mr. Arsene...I'll say I was in the woods, that I saw you both. He insulted
and attacked you. Listen, please. Do I say he was drunk? You can count
on me. I hate them. I'll stand up to them all!"
- the scene of Arsene's epileptic fit when he fell onto
the floor, and Mouchette attended to him by wiping his face, but
then he conducted an assaultive predatory rape of Mouchette - he
pushed her to the floor in front of a roaring fire (at first she
resisted, but then wrapped her arms around his back, as the scene
faded to black)
Predatory Rape of Mouchette by Arsene
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- later, when questioned about Arsene's drunken night
with her and her suspicious alibi, Mouchette remarkably declared: "Monsieur
Arsene is my lover"
Mouchette's Off-Screen Suicide
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Rolling Down Hill
(3 times)
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Space Left Behind on Hillside
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Splash Into Water
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- in the film's tragic and shattering conclusion after
her mother's death (who cautioned Mouchette with her dying words:
"Steer clear of drunks and good-for-nothings") and at a
spot where hunters shot a helpless rabbit, a desperate Mouchette
used her dead mother's sheet shroud, given to her by an elderly woman,
to cover herself in order to roll down a hill three times - before
she was able to successfully and suicidally drown herself (offscreen)
- there was no image of her body entering the water,
only the sound and view of her entry splash, with a postlude of the Magnificat
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Mouchette's Terminally-Ill Mother in Church
Young Mouchette - Caring for Her Mother's Newborn Baby
Boy
Mouchette Mistreated at School
Often Condemned and Disregarded
Flinging Muddy Dirt Clods at Bullying Schoolgirls
With Arsène During Epileptic Fit
Caring For Her Dying Mother
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