In Memoriam

Guillaume Depardieu, 1971-2008

By October 13, 2008No Comments

Guillame

In Pola X

It is ter­rible to learn of the death of Guillaume Depardieu, of pneu­mo­nia, at the age of 37. The act­or had a fam­ously event­ful and troubled life, and it is no insult to his excep­tion­al tal­ent to say that he brought a good deal of his own pain to his screen work. In 2003 he had to have a leg amputated—the res­ult of an unstop­pable infec­tion that stemmed from a wound he sus­tained in a motor­cycle acci­dent in 1995. Not too long after that, he was back on the bike for Leos Carax’s stag­ger­ing Pola X.

In Jacques Rivette’s recent mas­ter­work Né touchez pas la hache, Depardieu brings a par­tic­u­lar heav­i­ness to his por­tray­al of the obsess­ive lov­er Armand de Montriveau. The per­form­ance embod­ies a bit of a para­dox. Montriveau, lugubri­ous, hag­gard, and haunted, is so genu­inely world-weary, it seems a mir­acle he can lift a fin­ger. And yet he pur­sues Jeanne Balibar’s Duchess like a hell­hound. Balibar is three years older than Depardieu was. In the film, he looks a good ten years her senior. 

Depardieu con­trib­uted an English-language com­ment­ary to the 1999 Fox-Lorber DVD of Pola X. If it was sad­den­ing to listen to when Depardieu lived, it’s doubly so now. He is halt­ing, shy, self-deprecating (always), full of nervous laughter, unfail­ingly hon­est, spec­tac­u­larly intel­li­gent. And, it is quite clear, deeply unhappy. At a little past the film’s mid­point, he says: “Nobody, not even in my fam­ily, wanted me to do this film.
Um…even God, even everything, no one wanted me to do this movie. But  I want.   Because…I’m not very sane.  I can get crazy in a very little time….[laugh] So…I spent
all my life to…run away from cinema…and when I met Leos, I knew, immediately,
that we had to do some­thing togeth­er. And for me, I wanted to to to to be…in
this adven­ture. I wanted to do it. But it didn’t change noth­ing. I’m always
with my, the same prob­lems, the same [grim laugh], even if I, now, even if I
feel bet­ter. It didn’t change noth­ing. You’re just able to…manage. But…change.
You can­not change.”

Rest in peace. 

No Comments

  • Sad; I did­n’t see enough of his films but he was mar­velous in Lengelais.

  • Patrick Z. McGavin says:

    At the press con­fer­ence of Né touchez pas la hache at Berlin last year, Jacques Rivette spoke admir­ably and bril­liantly about Guillaume Depardieu. Rivette said it was see­ing Pola X that spurred him to approach Guillaume and offer him any pro­ject he could con­ceive. Rivette said he knew he wanted to work with Jeanne Balibar but he needed a strong, com­pel­ling act­or to play off of her. Some films mark a tri­umph of cast­ing over aes­thet­ics. In the best films, act­ors bring a dens­ity and power to the work that elev­ates the mater­i­al into some­thing sub­lime, spe­cial. Finally, how unspeak­ably sad that two of the great act­ors of con­tem­por­ary French cinema, Guillaume and Marie Trintignant, are gone so young.

  • Gareth says:

    Strange – in that way that young death makes everything seem strange – that Trintignant and Depardieu appeared togeth­er in 1993’s “Cible émouv­ante”, along with the now-78-year-old Jean Rochefort, and only the lat­ter of the trio is still with us. A nice little film to remem­ber them by, too, for what it’s worth.

  • Gary the Grammarian says:

    I don’t under­stand your use of clauses con­cern­ing this chain of events:
    1) he had to have one of his legs ampu­tated in 2003 because of the acci­dent that
    2) he had in 1995
    and then after the acci­dent he:
    3) starred in Pola X, which came out in 1999
    Why not just say that he had a motor­cycle acci­dent in 1995, was back on a bike for 1999’s Pola X, and then, in 2003, had one of his legs ampu­tated because of wounds stem­ming from the accident?
    I know, I know: ‘Hey Gary the Grammarian, go f*^% your­self, I’m try­ing to play with lin­ear­ity, jumble stuff up, makes it more inter­est­ing that way.’
    Just try­ing to help.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    I was­n’t try­ing to play with lin­ear­ity, or make any­thing more “Interesting.” What happened to the poor guy was “inter­est­ing” enough. I was just try­ing to get across the weird­ness of it—injured 1995, speed­ing around on a bike again in ’98 or so, and leg­less in ’03…as a res­ult of what happened in ’95.
    But you can go f**% your­self anyway.
    Kidding.

  • Rob says:

    Here’s hop­ing his untimely and ter­ribly abrupt death will accel­er­ate the dis­tri­bu­tion of PROCESS:
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0354848/externalreviews

  • Paul C. says:

    One of the most fas­cin­at­ing aspects of NE TOUCHEZ PAS LA HACHE was the way Rivette did­n’t even try to hide the fact that Depardieu had lost his leg. The most obvi­ous example is the early shot in which G.D. is walk­ing down stairs and he misses one with his prosteth­ic, and he just keeps walk­ing like it’s noth­ing new to him. But even more strik­ing to me was how his gait played out on the soundtrack in the scenes at Balibar’s house, creak­ing against the hard­wood floors, mak­ing his pres­ence unmis­tak­able in com­par­is­on to her almost silent foot­falls. Says everything about the dif­fer­ence between the two char­ac­ters without ever draw­ing atten­tion to itself.
    R.I.P. Guillaume.

  • Campaspe says:

    Beautiful, touch­ing post.

  • Andrew Wyatt says:

    I’m in the minor­ity here: I found “Né touchez pas la hache” to be a dreary, unstim­u­lat­ing fail­ure. I blame Rivette, how­ever, not Depardieu, who gave a sharp per­form­ance as Armand. (In my review I referred to his “flair for con­vey­ing Armand’s strange blend of long­ing and lout­ish­ness.”) It was a por­tray­al that piqued me, des­pite my irrit­a­tion with the film, and encour­aged me to dig deep­er into Depardieu’s career. Now to hear about this tragedy… Such a shame. As with any act­or of tal­ent who passes, the best way we can hon­or Depardieu is to evan­gel­ize on behalf of his work.

  • Ajlouny says:

    I know this has come out so long ago, but just learn­ing of it today. It’s tra­gic, espe­cially since he died so young. RIP