The Young Girls of Rochefort

Reviewed by: Cllrdr

September 12, 1998

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"The Young Girls of Rochefort" is one of the strangest films ever made. Not an all-singer like "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg," it has dialogue, more conventional set-ups for musical numbers, and lots and lots of dancing. Still it's in no way an ordinary musical. Rather it's a musical about characters who've seen a lot of musicals. Catherine Deneuve and Francois Dorleac don't so much play parts as they embody simultaneous evocations of Judy Garland and Lucille Bremer in "Meet Me in St, Louis," AND Jane Russell and Marilyn Monroe in "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes." Gene Kelly appears as Gene Kelly -- in all his Gene Kellyness. He dances with children, trills tunes to old ladies, and when he dances with Dorleac repeats the exact choreography he created for himself and Leslie Caron in the "Our Love is Here To Stay" number from "An American in Paris." Rochefort is a real place, but Jacques -- who had his designer Bernard Evien repaint it for the occasion -- treats it as a set. It as if the entire city were created for the sole purpose of having this film made in it. Jacques was an exceedingly late-bloomer sexually. He wasn't "out" in '67, but no straight filmmaker on earth would ever write the line: "I can't find my concerto! And I always keep it in the same place -- right betwen my compact and my sunglasses!"