Film Review
Georges Lacombe's
Cargaison blanche
may have the same title as a
1937
film directed by Robert Siodmak but it hardly qualifies as a remake
as the plot bares only the slightest resemblance, even though both
films derive from the same article,
Le
Chemin de Rio, written by Jean Masson. White slavery being
a far less widespread phenomenon in the late 1950s than it was in the
1930s (or maybe it was just less widely reported), Lacombe's film
immediately looks out-dated and irrelevant, although what offends most
is its rambling and uneven plot which clearly belongs to a film of a
much earlier decade. Françoise Arnoul's dazzling star
presence is the one thing that salvages the film and makes it more fun
than it deserves to be. Needless to say, Arnoul spends most of
the film dressed in practically nothing, flaunting every last
millimetre of sex appeal as if her life (or, more accurately, the
livelihood of her producers) depended on it.
Jean-Claude Brialy is the only cast member who comes close to matching
Arnoul's charisma and energy, but he is casually killed off in the
first ten minutes so
Cargaison
blanche ends up pretty much as a one-woman show, with the
super-sexy Arnoul dicing death with an atrocious script and a wild
assortment of frightening older females. There are some other
male actors in the cast, but they're so bland and anaemic that you
scarcely notice them, the two exceptions being our old friend Robert
Dalban, who is hastily dispatched in the film's grimmest scene (the
only one where Lacombe appears to be on form), and Georges Aminel, a
sympathetic Martinican whose main claim to fame is that he dubbed Yul
Brynner for the French versions of his films.
Oddly, for a film that supposedly condemns the exploitation of women,
Arnoul is exploited left, right and centre, forced to strip to her
frilly underwear in one scene by her employer, who obviously has
matriarchal lesbian tendencies. Aside from indulging the other
characters' lurid sexual fantasies, Arnoul's ballsy reporter gives
feminism a power of good. Not only does she take the initiative
and show qualities thought at the time to be the preserve of the male
sex (courage, tenacity and cunning), she is incredibly independent and
relies on no one but herself. At the film's soppy conclusion,
Arnoul promises her dull-as-ditchwater and generally useless beau that
she will change her ways, before turning to camera and confiding in us:
"I'll take far more precautions - next time." This is the modern
woman, and love her or her loathe her, she's definitely not going to go
away.
© Willems Henri, James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Georges Lacombe film:
Café de Paris (1938)
Film Synopsis
After her colleague Jean is killed in a road accident, aspiring
reporter Françoise soon suspects he may have been the victim of
foul play and begins her own investigation. Just before he
died, Jean confided in Françoise that he was on to a story that
would make him famous. In her dead colleague's office,
Françoise finds her first clue - the address of Madame Irma, a
fortune teller. On meeting Irma she pretends to have come to
Paris to find a job. Through Irma, she is soon engaged as a
housemaid at the villa of the wealthy Maria Ploit, the owner of a
successful import-export business. One of Madame Ploit's
associates, Monsieur Raymond, takes an immediate liking to
Françoise and gets her a better paid job at a nightclub run by a
woman named Mado. The reporter soon realises that the nightclub
is a transit point for a prostitution trafficking operation...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.