Film Review
Between his early career in Germany and a highly productive period in
Hollywood, director Robert Siodmak made around half a dozen films in
France, some of which bear the distinctive film noir imprint that would
feature so heavily in his later work.
Cargaison blanche is one such film,
an entertaining concoction of gangster film and comedy thriller which
somehow manages to combine farce with an uncompromising
depiction of one of the seedier criminal exploits of the time, white
slavery. The film is also known as
Le Chemin de Rio, after the novel
on which it is based.
Whilst it may lack the cohesion, bleakness and stylistic brilliance of
some of Siodmak's subsequent film noir dramas,
Cargaison blanche is a slick
production, well-scripted by Henri Jeanson (whose talents were very
much in demand at this time) and buoyed up by some juicy
performances from a very distinguished cast. Jules Berry is in
his element as the deliciously villainous white slaver tout, exuding
charm and venality from just about every pore, but with so much class
that you can't help rooting for him as he wallows in his diabolical
machinations. As Berry's woman beating henchman, Marcel Dalio
gives a good impression of a psychotic Neanderthal with an anger
management problem, a far cry from his cultured châtelain
portrayal in Jean Renoir's
La Règle du jeu
(1939). In the end, though, the film is stolen hook, line and
sinker by Jean-Pierre Aumont and Käthe von Nagy, who provide the
lively comic digressions which pretty well divert the film away from
film noir thriller territory into the more amusing pastures of romantic
comedy. After watching his exuberant turn in this film, you'd
almost swear that baby-faced Aumont was one of the Marx Brothers - he
could certainly have given Zeppo a run for his money.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Robert Siodmak film:
Mollenard (1938)
Film Synopsis
In Spain, Blanco is the boss of a notorious white slavery ring which
lures attractive young women with the promise of a dancing career and
ships them off to Brazil to be sold as prostitutes. When
Blanco's right-hand man Moreno learns that his mistress committed
suicide after being sent to Rio de Janeiro, he swears
vengeance. Killing Blanco is too easy. Instead,
Moreno seduces his daughter Béatrice and contrives to have her sent
to Rio where she will be forced into working in a brothel.
Meanwhile, two rival journalists, Henri Voisin and Marion Baker, are
investigating Blanco's shading business operation. When Marion
decides to use herself as bait to expose the white slavers, Henri, who
is madly in love with her, has no option but to act as her personal
bodyguard. They soon find they are in deeper water than they had
expected...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.