Film Review
When it was released in March 1934,
Ces
messieurs de la Santé could not have been more topical,
coming as it did in the wake of a series of high-profile financial
scandals that rocked France in the early 1930s. The most
notorious of these was the Stavisky Affair which implicated
numerous important society figures, including prominent politicians, in
one of the most outrageous investment scams of all time. The
central character in the film, superbly portrayed by Raimu, is clearly
based on the fraudster Serge Alexandre Stavisky, although the film
tactfully avoids any direct reference to the Stavisky Affair as this
was a highly contentious issue at the time. (Speculation that the
French government may have been implicated in Stavisky's apparent
suicide was a factor that hastened the demise of the Third Republic a
few years later). It is worth noting that a contemporary American
film based on the Stavisky Affair, Michael Curtiz's
Stolen Holiday (1937), was
never released in France.
Ces messieurs de la Santé
differs from Curtiz's film in two main respects. Firstly, it
avoids any direct reference to the Stavisky Affair (had it done so, it
would almost certainly have been banned outright by the government
censor); secondly, it opts for a far more comedic approach. Based
on a stage play of the same title by Paul Armont and Léopold
Marchand, the film makes light of one of the most serious themes of the
time, the craze for making easy money through what are effectively no
more than simple pyramid investment schemes. Crooked characters
like Stavisky would never have attained notoriety if there had not been
a vast number of greedy, gullible individuals who were anxious to make
a quick buck at a time when genuine investment opportunities were few
and far between. The Genissier family typifies this stratum of
society, which the film savagely pokes fun at, showing the ease with which
a group of seemingly decent, high-minded people can be corrupted and
deceived by the smooth-talking confidence trickster who has nothing to
sell but hot air (as he himself admits,
il vend du vent...).
The film was directed by Pierre Colombier, one of the lesser known
French film directors of the period who is remembered mainly through
the films he made with Fernandel, such as
Ignace (1937) and
Les Rois du sport (1937).
Ces messieurs de la Santé is
easily one of Colombier's better films (far superior to his lightweight
Fernandel comedies), and is distinguished by the fluidity of its camera
work, the quality of the acting and some stylish set design that gives
an effective visual representation of the insane growth of an
investment bubble (the hero starts out in a cramped shop selling
women's underwear and ends up on what looks like an Art Deco version of
the deck of the Starship
Enterprise,
complete with a revolving desk that is the acme of power and
decadence). The film is extremely well cast, Raimu being
particularly well-suited to play the irresistible con-man
Taffard. A youthful Edwige Feuillère makes a memorable
appearance, in one of the seductive, morally ambiguous roles that would
become her stock in trade (a year on, she would court controversy by
appearing topless in Abel Gance's
Lucrèce Borgia).
Pauline Carton, one of the great but easily overlooked supporting
artistes of French cinema, revels in one of her finest character
performances, very nearly stealing the show as the hilariously gullible
Madame Genissier.
Watching
Ces messieurs de la
Santé today, eighty years since it was made, it is
striking how relevant it still is. It may not be as grand and
artistically inspired as Marcel Lherbier's monumental
L'Argent
(1928), French cinema's most vehement assault on the sin of
speculation, but it offers an effective satire and continues to have an
enormous resonance, as pertinent to our own troubled times as it
undoubtedly was at the height of the Great Depression. Some
things never change...
© James Travers 2013
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Next Pierre Colombier film:
L'École des cocottes (1935)
Film Synopsis
Shortly after being arrested for fraud, the discredited banker Jules
Taffard manages to escape from the Santé prison. He evades
the police by hiding out in a small lingerie shop where his former
mistress, Claire, works. Adopting the name Gédéon,
Taffard persuades the shop's owner, Madame Genissier, to offer him a
job as a night watchman. Taffard so impresses his employer with
his business sense and honesty that she soon makes him her director of
finance. Taffard's speculative ventures prove to be staggeringly
profitable and Madame Genissier and her son Hector rapidly find
themselves the proud owners of an upmarket department store, blissfully
unaware that their benefactor is doing a spot of gun-running on the
side. Taffard's ambitions apparently know no bounds and in no
time at all the financial wizard has founded his own highly profitable
bank, with the Genissiers his main shareholders. But once again
Taffard overreaches himself and his business empire threatens to
implode when his most ambitious swindle begins to unravel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.