Film Review
The summer of 1939 was a great one for French comedy. Within a
month of their memorable pairing in
Fric-Frac
(1939) Michel Simon and Arletty were brought together for another round
of burlesque fun, one that takes its inspiration from Marcel Arnac's
popular 1929 novel
À
l'héritage ou Les Vacances singulières.
Director Jean Boyer shared the screenwriting duties with Jean-Pierre
Feydeau, the son of the distinguished playwright Georges Feydeau, so
any resemblance to a Feydeau farce can hardly be called
accidental. It was Boyer who gave the effervescent Arletty her
star-making role in
La Chaleur du sein (1938),
another comedy that partnered her with Michel Simon.
Circonstances atténuantes
is a film that is perfectly calculated to exploit the comedic talents
of its two stars. Arletty is, once again, captivating as the
proverbial 'tart with a heart', a role that stuck to her for most of
her career, and Simon is hilarious as a well-meaning judge who has some
odd notions when it comes to reforming criminals. With its
frequent allusions to
la
fraternité des hommes the film feels like a nostalgic
throwback to the optimistic days of the Front Populaire, not something
that was released just a few months before the outbreak of World War
II. Like Jean Renoir's
La Marseillaise (1938),
Circonstances atténuantes
looks like a conscious appeal for national unity (all social classes
working together rather than against one another) at a time of
impending crisis.
The film's highlight comes twenty minutes in, an enjoyable (albeit
slightly protracted) choral rendering of its famous song
Comme de bien entendu, composed by
Georges Van Parys with lyrics by Jean Boyer. It wasn't often that
Michel Simon and Arletty were called upon to exhibit their musical
talents on screen, so the fact they do so here, and with evident
enthusiasm, adds greatly to the film's appeal. The song (a
valse musette which recounts a love
story that turns sour) became an instant hit record (interpreted by
another legend of French cinema, Albert Préjean) and was,
apparently, sung by French soldiers as they went to war with Nazi
Germany. That France quickly fell to Germany can presumably be
put down to extenuating circumstances.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Boyer film:
Noix de coco (1939)
Film Synopsis
Two months into his retirement Gaëtan Le Sentencier, once a busy
and highly respected judge, finds himself at a loose end. By way
of distraction, he decides to take a holiday with his wife at
Plombières-les-Bains. On the way, their car breaks down
and, as a storm threatens, they take shelter in a small hostelry on the
outskirts of Paris. Here they encounter a colourful collection of
Parisian lowlife consisting of petty criminals and prostitutes.
So warmly are they received by the landlord Jules Le Bouic that Le
Sentencier and his wife put aside their prejudices and take a liking to
their seedy entourage. Le Sentencier even manages to convince
everyone that he is an experienced thief and agrees to lead the crooks
on their next criminal enterprise - to rob his own house! When Le
Sentencier's new friends discover the truth they are far from happy,
but the former judge wins them round by pleading extenuating
circumstances...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.