Film Review
Although he is best remembered today for his stylish thrillers of the 1960s and '70s
-
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969),
Peur sur la ville (1975)
- the Armenian born director Henri Verneuil was adept in a whole range of
genres including comedy and melodrama. Having directed several lively comedies with Fernandel -
notably
L'Ennemi public no 1 (1953) -
Verneuil revealed a more sensitive side in his poignant melodrama
Des gens sans importance depicting a fragile romance between
an older man (Jean Gabin) and a woman who is young enough to be his daughter (Françoise Arnoul).
Whilst it is filmed in a more naturalistic manner, the film has something
of the oppressive fatalistic mood of Gabin's pre-WWII films, such as Marcel
Carné's
Le Quai des brumes (1938).
Here the threat comes not from nasty underworld villains but from the prejudice
of a society that will not allow such a romance to endure. It is a scenario
that is played out in some of Gabin's later films - in
Le Désordre et la nuit (1958)
he falls for Nadja Tiller, and in
En cas de malheur (1958)
he is tempted by Brigitte Bardot - but only in Verneuil's film does it have
such a stark tragic dimension. Gabin's performance is one of finest, possibly
the subtlest of his career, and Arnoul has never looked more alluring
than she does here. Even when the story's outcome is all too easy to guess,
the ending never fails to deliver an emotional wallop.
© James Travers 2001
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Next Henri Verneuil film:
Les Amants du Tage (1955)
Film Synopsis
Jean Viard is a long-distance lorry driver who makes a habit of stopping
off at a roadside inn run by his friend Barchandeau during his frequent excursions
between Paris and Bordeaux. One day around Christmas time Jean meets
Coltilde, a new waitress at the inn, and instantly falls in love with her.
This is in spite of the fact that he is already married - to a sour-tempered
old woman he can barely tolerate - and has three children. Even though
Jean is at least thirty years her senior, Clotilde is equally taken with
him and the two are soon pursuing a love affair that is as tender as it is
passionate.
All goes well until the day when Jean has a violent falling out with his
foreman, after which he suddenly finds himself without work. Concerned
over what has happened to her lover, Clotilde makes her own way to Paris,
but when she sees how dejected Jean is after losing his job she cannot bear
to break to him the news that she is pregnant with his child. Instead,
she finds work as a maid in a hotel and contemplates having an abortion.
By now, Jean's wife has found out about his infidelity and the inevitable
confrontation leads Jean to turn his back on his family forever. After
her abortion, Clotilde returns to Jean, although by now her health has taken
a dramatic turn for the worse...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.