Biography: life and films
Few film directors have witnessed in their lifetime as dramatic a re-appraisal
of their work as René Clair. In the late 1920s, early '30s, Clair was considered one of the world's foremost cineastes, ranking alongside
Eisenstein, Chaplin and D.W. Griffith, but this acclaim would not endure.
By the 1950s, he was far less well-regarded and some critics, notably François
Truffaut, were vitriolic in their contempt for him. Whilst it is true
that Clair's later films show little sign of the great auteur he was once
seen to epitomise, the director was more favourably judged after his death
and he is now widely considered one of the most important French filmmakers
of his generation. Clair directed only twenty-three full-length films, yet these
include some of the most cherished and influential films of their time,
as well as some of the wierdest flights of fancy ever committed to celluloid.
The new medium of cinema was still in its infancy when René Clair
was born in Paris on 11th November 1898. His real name was René
Lucien Chomette and he was the son of a successful soap manufacturer.
He grew up in the popular Halles district of Paris, an environment that doubtless
influenced his early films. After being invalidated out of the First
World War (in which he served as an ambulance driver), he began a career
as a journalist, writing articles under a pseudonym (René Després)
for the newspaper L'Intransigeant. It was the singer Damia, for whom
he wrote a few songs, who persuaded him to enter the film business, originally
as an actor. Adopting the name René Clair, he appeared in a
handful of films, including Louis Feuillade's
Parisette (1921).
After working as an assistant to Jacques de Baroncelli on
Le Carillon
de minuit (1922) and
La Légende de soeur Béatrix (1923),
Clair made his directing debut in 1923 with his first short film,
Paris qui dort, which has
the distinction of being one of cinema's first science-fiction films as well
as being dramatically shot on the Eiffel Tower. Before this film was
released in 1925, Clair was commissioned by the Théâtre des
Champs-Elysées to make a surreal short film for the interval in the
ballet
Relâche. This film,
Entr'acte, had strong Dadaist
influences and instantly gained Clair admission to the Parisian avant-garde.
The visual poetry and flair for comedic invention that Clair had exhibited
on these first films is just as evident in his first silent features,
Le
Fantôme du Moulin-Rouge (1925) and
Le Voyage imaginaire
(1926). The latter film featured a young actress, Bronja Perlmutter,
whom Clair married in 1926. Their son, Jean-François, was born
the following year.
It was for Alexandre Kamenka's prestigious company Films Albatros that René
Clair made his next three films -
La Proie du vent (1927), followed
by adaptations of two plays by Eugène Labiche:
Un chapeau de paille
d'Italie (1928) and
Les Deux timides (1928). These latter
films are of particular note because they demonstrate Clair's penchant for
turning humorous dialogue into visual comedy, inviting flattering comparisons
with Chaplin's films. It was during his stint at Albatros that Clair
came into contact with the talented camera operator Georges Périnal,
who worked on many of his subsequent films. One film that fell by the
wayside was
Prix de beauté,
which Clair co-authored with the esteemed Austrian filmmaker G.W. Pabst as
a vehicle for Louise Brooks. When Clair abandoned the project for financial
reasons it was taken up and completed by Augusto Genina.
As the silent era drew to a close, Clair had serious misgivings over the
move to sound, but it was with his first sound film,
Sous les toits de Paris
(1930), that he had his international breakthrough. With its idealised
portrait of working class life in a romanticised Paris, the film paved the
way for the poetic realist style of Clair's contemporaries, Marcel Carné,
Jean Renoir, Jean Grémillon
and
Julien Duvivier.
Clair's subsequent
Le Million
(1930),
À nous la liberté
(1931) and
Quatorze juillet
(1933) were also noted for their inspired use of sound and helped to popularise
an emerging genre, the film musical. The commercial and critical failure
of
Le Dernier milliardaire (1934) brought to a sudden end Clair's
run of good fortune.
It was in England that René Clair made his next two films -
The Ghost Goes West
(1935), produced by Alexander Korda, and
Break the News (1938), a
remake of an earlier French film
Le Mort en fuite (1936)
directed by André Berthomieu. The failure of the latter film
led Clair to return to France to direct
Air pur, but this was abandoned
at the outbreak of WWII. With his family, Clair left France in June
1940 and settled in America, where he was soon able to resume his filmmaking
career in Hollywood. Over the next five years, Clair made four full-lengths
films for four different studios -
The Flame of New Orleans (1941),
I Married a Witch (1942),
It Happened Tomorrow (1944) and
And Then There Were None
(1945), the latter being the first screen adaptation of Agatha Christie's
popular whodunit
Ten Little Indians. He also contributed to
the portmanteau film
Forever and a Day (1943).
When he returned to France in 1946, Clair was in a nostalgic frame of mind
and this showed in his next film
Le Silence est d'or
(1947), a wholehearted tribute to the early years of silent cinema.
La Beauté du diable
(1949) then saw him return to the whimsical fantasy offerings of his early
films for the first of three screen collaborations with rising star
Gérard Philipe.
This was followed by another fantasy
Les Belles de nuit (1952)
and then his first colour feature,
Les Grandes Manoeuvres
(1955), which won the Prix Louis-Delluc. Clair's next film
Porte des Lilas (1957) shows
a return to the proto-poetic realism of his early sound films, with the legendary
singer Georges Brassens making his one and only film appearance. He
then directed Gérard Philipe one last time in a stage production of
Alfred de Musset's
On ne badine pas avec l'amour
at the TNP Théâtre de Chaillot - not long before the
actor's premature death in November 1959.
It was around this time that Clair came under fire from several film critics,
including the firebrands on the Cahiers du cinéma.
François Truffaut
was most outspoken in his criticism of Clair, dismissing him as old hat.
Clair's subsequent films merely served to bear out Truffaut's assessment
of him. Neither in the anthology films
La Française
et l'amour (1960) and
Les Quatre vérités (1962),
nor in his features
Tout l'or
du monde (1961) and
Les Fêtes galantes (1965) did Clair
live up to the standard of his past achievements. His style of cinema
was by now démodé, his subjects irrelevant compared with what
the new generation of filmmaker was offering the public.
Not long after he was elected to the Académie française in
1960, Clair gave up filmmaking altogether to concentrate on a literary career,
although he continued directing for the theatre - one of his last productions
being a staging of Gluck's opera
Orphée et Eurydice for the
Paris Opéra in 1972. He also wrote and directed one episode
in the television series
Les Fables de La Fontaine (1966). Aged
82, René Clair died on 15th March 1981. He is buried in the
old cemetery at Neuilly-sur-Seine, Île-de-France.
© James Travers 2015
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