Film Review
Paul Czinner's adaptation of Claude Anet's 1920 novel
Ariane, jeune fille does it few
favours and presents something of an endurance challenge even for those
who are familiar with films of this era. Judging by this film,
and its equally ugly twin sister
Mélo (1932), the
limitations of early sound cinema were major creative blockers for
Czinner, an Austro-Hungarian director who had previously distinguished himself in the
silent era, with such films as
Kammerspiel
tel Nju (1924). The lethargic pace and airless staginess
of
Ariane, jeune fille russe
are typical of films of this era, but that doesn't excuse it for being
so unremmitingly dull.
Such was the temperamental nature of the sound recording equipment at
the time that the actors were forbidden to overlap their lines, so what
we have are gaps between the dialogue exchanges through which you could
pass not just a coach and horses but the entire US cavalry. Add to
this the horribly static camera set-ups and the impression you get is a
film that is being played back at one quarter of its proper
speed. It doesn't help that the performances from the leads
actors - Gaby Morlay and Victor Francen (both major stars of the time) - are
stiff and colourless, so
much so that they strangle the life out of whatever human feeling
may have been lurking in the pages of the script. Czinner made two other versions of
the film at the time, one in German, another in English (which starred
his wife Elisabeth Bergner), all equally forgettable. Billy
Wilder would have far more success with his 1957 adaptation, titled
Love in the Afternoon.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Against the wishes of her family, Ariane, a naïve Russian girl,
decides to study at Paris University. Not long after her arrival
in the French capital, she meets Constantin, a much older businessman
who is looking for an amorous fling and nothing more. Ariane
cannot help herself falling in love with the older man and she is
heartbroken when he leaves to resume his busy career abroad. When
they next meet in Paris, some time later, Constantin offers to resume
their erstwhile romance. Ariane hesitates and invents the fiction
that she has had many lovers. Appalled by this revelation,
Constantin spurns his young mistress, but he is even more shocked when Ariane
tells him the truth...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.