POURQUOI PAS!
Scen.: Coline Serreau. F.: Jean-François Robin. M.: Sophie Tatischeff. Scgf.: Denis Martin-Sisteron. Mus.: Jean-Pierre Mas. Int.: Sami Frey (Fernand), Christine Murillo (Alexa), Mario Gonzalez (Louis), Nicole Jamet (Sylvie), Michel Aumont (police inspector), Mathé Souverbie (Sylvie’s mother), Jacques Rispal (Louis’ father), Alain Solomon (Roger). Prod.: Claude Faraldo per Dimage e Société Nouvelle de Distribution (SND). DCP. D.: 93’. Col.
Film Notes
In the mid-1970s, Coline Serreau tackled her first work of fiction on subjects that were still taboo in French cinema: bisexuality and polyamory. With its ménage à trois made up of Alexa, Louis and Fernand, tucked away in a suburban home, Pourquoi pas! shook up social conventions.
The screenplay was twice refused CNC’s “advance against earnings” funding – established in 1959 by the Minister for Cultural Affairs, André Malraux, to allow original films struggling for finance to see the light of day. Undeterred, Serreau showed her project to Antoinette Fouque, one of the pioneers of the Women’s Liberation Movement, who was meanwhile helping her to shoot the documentary Mais qu’est-ce qu’elles veulent?. It was third time lucky when the film came next before the commission, with one jury member threatening to resign if Pourquoi pas! was not supported. In December 1977, the threesome finally got to live out their affair on the big screen. It is sensitively performed by Christine Murillo and Mario Gonzalez, who would go on to enjoy significant careers in theatre, and Sami Frey, in a departure from his customary brooding romantic roles.
Hailed by the critics, the film won numerous prizes and was well-received by the public in France and beyond. But television back then was still under the yolk of ORTF, the French Broadcasting and Television Office that, in 1975, did not seem disposed to allow this joyous and subversive utopia into viewers’ homes. The state channel FR3 that had agreed to part-fund the film withdrew on learning that it featured homosexuality. Unaired and eclipsed by the phenomenal success of Trois hommes et un couffin, Pourquoi pas! slowly fell into obscurity. It was high time to rediscover this important and gently subversive film.
Tristan Brossat