Film Review
Having made a name for himself in the silent era as an actor (appearing
notably in Jean Epstein's 1923 film
Coeur
fidèle) Léon Mathot enjoyed some success as a
film director in the 1930s and 40s. One of his most successful
film as a director is his grimly noirish adaptation of Gaston Leroux's
novel
Chéri-Bibi,
which features one of the most spectacular prison escape sequences of
any French film but is let down by its obvious budgetary limitations
when the plots crash-lands and fizzles out to nothing in French Guiana.
The first half of the film is actually quite good, an admirable example
of 1930s French film noir that showcases the talents of Pierre Fresnay,
cast against type as an almost psychopathic gangster type.
Moodily lit with stark shadows, in a way that presages early American
film noir of the following decade,
Chéri-Bibi
has a brooding intensity which attains its climax in the dramatic
escape attempt on board a prison ship. Regrettably, Mathot was
unable to sustain this level of creativity for the rest of the film and
everything that happens after the midpoint is an anti-climax.
Part of the problem is the horrible mismatch between the location
scenes and cheap studio mock-ups, which, in too many scenes, involve
actors standing up and talking in front of what is obviously a blown up
photograph of a jungle. This convention may have been tolerated
by an audience of the 1930s but today it looks tacky and makes it
virtually impossible for the spectator to suspend his disbelief.
It's not only money that is lacking, imagination is also in short
supply. Mathot partly redeems himself in the final part of the
film, which overcomes the artificiality of a studio-filmed exterior by
effective use of mist and lighting.
It doesn't help that the performances in the second half of the film
are way below par, although this can be partly attributed to a script
that completely runs out of steam by the fifty minute mark.
Fresnay's performance becomes increasingly unconvincing as the title
character fails to develop beyond its obvious archetype, but Fresnay's
grunting and face pulling are preferable to Jean-Pierre Aumont's almost
unbearable histrionics.
Chéri-Bibi
is the classic 'film of two halves' - it begins promisingly with flair
and imagination but all too soon it degenerates into a rambling, poorly
realised melodrama.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
A fugitive from justice, Chéri-Bibi is captured after being
denounced by his girlfriend Ginette and ends up on a convict ship bound
for Guiana, to serve out a long sentence of hard labour. His
fellow prisoners include Raoul de St-Delmas, nicknamed Palas, who has
been wrongly convicted of the murder of his uncle. At first
Chéri-Bibi mistrusts Palas, believing him to be an informer, but
later takes him into his confidence and they become friends. An
attempt by the prisoners to take control of the ship ends in dismal
failure and they are soon on their way to prison. Realising that
Palas has a chance of clearing his name if he can only get back to
France, Chéri-Bibi organises another escape plan...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.