‘Being Maria’ Review: ‘Last Tango in Paris’ Star Maria Schneider Gets a Behind-the-Scenes Biopic That Starts Strong but Fizzles Out (2024)

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When New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael wrote a long and heated rave of Bernardo Bertolucci’s Last Tango in Paris after its premiere in 1972, she stated, among other things, that “this is a movie people will be arguing about for as long as there are movies.”

Kael may have been overdoing it when she stressed Last Tango‘s monumental importance, claiming it was a “movie breakthrough” and that it “altered the face of the art form.” But in terms of people arguing years later about the film’s legacy, she was spot-on.

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Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Cannes Première)
Cast: Anamaria Vartolomei, Matt Dillon, Giuseppe Maggio, Céleste Brunnquell, Yvan Attal, Marie Gillain
Director: Jessica Palud
Screenwriters: Jessica Palud, Laurette Polmanss
1 hour 42 minutes

Case in point: Being Maria, a new biopic of tormented French actress Maria Schneider, who at age 19 starred opposite Marlon Brando in the Bertolucci movie — a feat that launched her career as a promising new international actress while destroying her life at the same time.

The reasons for this are well known, and resurfaced over the past decade alongside the many #MeToo scandals that rocked the film world: For the infamous sequence in Last Tango in which Brando’s character, Paul, anally rapes Schneider’s character, Jeanne, using butter as a lubricant, the actress was never forewarned — the scene wasn’t in the original script — nor was she ever asked for consent. Brando and Bertolucci conspired to take her by surprise, and while the sodomy was simulated, the butter was real, and the entire humiliating experience would have a life-changing effect on Schneider.

Being Maria, directed by Jessica Palud (Revenir), who adapted the script from a book by Vanessa Schneider — a journalist for Le Monde and Maria’s younger cousin — is built entirely around that pivotal incident, both for better and for worse. Like the actress herself, whose life and career exploded with Last Tango’s success while unraveling at the same time, the movie loses its way after the scandal surrounding Bertolucci’s film fizzles out.

Before then, Palud paints a convincing portrait of a young woman from a troubled background whose connection to the movies was more personal than professional. When we first meet Maria (the excellent Anamaria Vartolomei from Happening), she’s on a film set admiring the work of her estranged father, the actor Daniel Gélin (Yvan Attal), who abandoned her as a child.

The girl is already 16 and lives with her mom (Marie Gillian), a former model who raised her daughter alone and doesn’t want Maria going anywhere near her dad. When she finds out the two are getting to know each other, she explodes with rage and viciously kicks Maria out of the house, which winds up inadvertently propelling her daughter into stardom.

Through the help of Daniel, Maria starts working as an actress, playing small roles in a handful of films. Soon she’s 19-years-old and sitting in a café opposite Bertolucci (Giuseppe Maggio), who’s decided to cast her in Last Tango, studying her like a caged tiger fascinated by its prey. Bertolucci fans beware: The director comes across here as a pompous and careless prima donna who only cares about his own art.

Brando (played quite convincingly by a heavily made-up Matt Dillon) is much more charming and paternalistic, initially taking Maria under his wing to show her the ropes of his profession. In one early scene they shoot together, Maris admires how Brando manages to shed real tears on set, to which he responds: “I wasn’t acting.”

This comes back to bite Maria big time when we arrive at the rape scene and the actress is caught completely off-guard. She trusted both Brando and Bertolucci, but the two wanted her reaction to be so real that they deliberately failed to warn her. After the scene is in the can and Schneider storms off to cry in her dressing room, she’s forced to come back and shoot the second part of the sequence. Like a pro, she does it, and nobody apologizes to her. The best Brando can say is: “It’s only a film.”

Palud, who previously worked on movie shoots as an assistant — including, ironically, on Bertolucci’s 2003 explicit three-way romance, The Dreamers — recreates the Last Tango production with both authenticity and emotional aplomb. The fatherless Maria finds a surrogate dad in Brando, only to be sad*stically betrayed by him, in an act that would wind up breaking her. No matter how successful Last Tango would become, Maria would only remember that scene.

The problem with the film is that that scene happens about a half hour in, after which we’re left with a downward and rather predictable spiral that fails to maintain our interest. We see Schneider losing it soon after Last Tango becomes a scandalous sensation — it received an X-rating in the U.S. and was legally banned in Italy, where all prints of the film were burned — partying all night long, dating a heroin addict and becoming one herself, nodding off on set and failing to remember her lines.

Vartolomei is a compelling actress and the camera truly loves her, but there’s only so much she can do with a script that doesn’t have much of a second or third act. Had Palud set the entire movie around the Last Tango shoot and its immediate aftermath, the drama would have perhaps been more compact. Instead, we’re left watching Maria dance in lots of nightclubs, go through withdrawal, get hospitalized, fall in love with a young film student (Céleste Brunnquell) doing a thesis on women in movies, and try to kick her habit for good. Plenty of stuff happens, but there’s no real arc to sustain the material.

This doesn’t mean Being Maria lacks value, as a film about how some major films should be reconsidered in light of our evolving standards. Not everyone loves the idea of an on-set intimacy coordinator, but Schneider certainly could have used one on Last Tango. Sure, the scene might have been less jarring in the end, but Bertolucci might not have traumatized his actress for life.

Palud’s film asks us to contemplate whether art should always truimph over real people, using Maria Schneider’s sad true story as proof that certain things aren’t worth doing to make a “movie breakthrough.”

‘Being Maria’ Review: ‘Last Tango in Paris’ Star Maria Schneider Gets a Behind-the-Scenes Biopic That Starts Strong but Fizzles Out (2024)

FAQs

What happened to Maria Schneider after Last Tango in Paris? ›

Did Maria Schneider continue acting after Last Tango in Paris? Yes, after Last Tango in Paris (1972), Maria Schneider acted in the following movies: Cari Genitori (1973), The Passenger (1975), Merry Go Round (1980), A Song for Europe (1985), Jane Eyre (1996), and many French movies.

Why is last tango in Paris controversial? ›

The New York City chapter of the National Organization for Women denounced the film as a tool of "male domination". The film's scandal centred mostly on an anal rape scene, featuring Paul's use of butter as a lubricant. According to Schneider, the scene was not in the original script, but was Brando's idea.

What was the infamous scene in Last Tango in Paris? ›

Released in the US on 1 February 1973, Bernardo Bertolucci's erotic drama follows a young woman from Paris (the late Maria Schneider), who begins an anonymous sexual relationship with an older American widower (Marlon Brando). In one shocking scene, Paul rapes Jeanne, using a stick of butter as a lubricant.

Is Maria Schneider alive? ›

Death. Schneider died of cancer on 3 February 2011 at age 58.

What happened to Kate in Last Tango? ›

Screenwriter Sally Wainwright has defended her most controversial Last Tango in Halifax storyline, when Caroline's pregnant wife Kate was killed in a car crash in what seemed like another example of TV's "dead lesbian cliché".

What happens at the end of Last Tango in Paris? ›

Just after Jeanne tells Paul her name, he lunges at her and she pulls out a pistol from a desk drawer (her father's military service revolver) and fatally shoots Paul once in the chest. Paul stumbles out to the balcony to view the sights of Paris one last time before he collapses to the floor of the balcony, dead.

Why did Last Tango in Halifax end so suddenly? ›

But the decision to end it seems to be down to Wainwright's jam-packed schedule. The writer/director has a new drama, Gentleman Jack, in the works, based on West Yorkshire diarist Anne Lister, with a third series of her Bafta-winning Happy Valley also expected next year.

Where was Last Tango in Paris filmed? ›

It's the Kennedy Eiffel Bar, avenue du President Kennedy. The salon, in which Paul and Jeanne disrupt the tango competition at the movie's climax, was the old, neo-Classical Salle Wagram, 39 avenue de Wagram, just down the road from Étoile. The origin of the Salle Wagram goes back to 1812, when a M.

Is Last Tango in Paris a good movie? ›

Naturalistic but evocative, Last Tango in Paris is a vivid exploration of pain, love, and sex featuring a typically towering Marlon Brando performance.

Where is last tango in Paris banned? ›

This film was banned in Chile for nearly thirty years. It was also banned in its country of origin, Italy, until 1987. According to Maria Schneider, the infamous "butter scene" was never in the script and it was improvised at the last minute by Marlon Brando and Bernardo Bertolucci, without consulting her.

What was the trivia in Last Tango in Paris? ›

Both Marlon Brando and Maria Schneider admitted that they felt raped by this film and refused to speak with director Bernardo Bertolucci ever again. Yet in his autobiography, Brando says that Bertolucci was one of the three best directors he ever worked with.

What is the meaning of the last tango? ›

1 being, happening, or coming at the end or after all others. the last horse in the race. 2 being or occurring just before the present; most recent.

What was the cause of death for Marlon Brando? ›

S11 E22: On July 1, 2004, at the age of 80 years old, actor Marlon Brando dies, and the cause of death on his death certificate is listed as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a rare respiratory disease.

What is the storyline of Last Tango in Paris? ›

What happened to Gillian's husband in Last Tango in Halifax? ›

After a day out together researching the wedding, a drunken Gillian tells Caroline she deliberately killed her husband and staged his suicide, as she could take no more of his abuse and feared he'd one day kill her. Caroline promises Gillian she will keep her secret.

What happens in the 5th season of Last Tango in Halifax? ›

Season 5 Episode Guide

A guest appearance by author Judith Tyzack threatens to bring a challenge to Caroline's headship; a phone call from New Zealand gives Alan and Celia pause for thought; tempers get frayed at Caroline and Gillian's joint birthday celebration; and Judith presents John with an awkward proposition.

How did the series Last Tango in Halifax end? ›

In the series finale of Last Tango in Halifax, Alan and Celia approach their seventh anniversary, Ted goes on an adventure, Caroline tries to make amends, and Gillian ponders what to do with the farm.

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