Film Review
Director Marcel Carné and screenwriter Jacques Prévert
planned to follow up their successful first collaboration,
Jenny
(1936), with a hard-hitting drama entitled
L'Île des enfants perdus
about a children's prison on the Breton island
Belle-Île-en-Mer.
The intervention of the censors put paid
to this project, although it would later resurface as
La Fleur de l'âge, the film
that Carné abandoned halfway through production in 1947. It was
Carné's producer Édouard Corniglion-Molinier who
suggested the team should adapt the novel
His First Offence by the English
crime writer Storer Clouston. The novel had been previously
adapted as
The Mystery of No. 47
(1917) by the American director Otis Thayer. Taking their
inspiration from British and American burlesque comedies of the
1930s, Carné and Prévert embellished Clouston's
story and made it into an outrageous farce that poked fun at the
bulwarks of French society - the police, the church, the press and,
especially, the bourgeoisie. Although this film -
Drôle de drame - is now
considered one of the comedy masterpieces of French cinema, it was very
poorly received on its first release, savaged by the critics and
ignored by the cinema-going public. It was not until the film's
re-release in 1951 that it came to be appreciated as a great cinematic
achievement.
The initial unpopularity of
Drôle
de drame is hard to account for. At the time of its
release, film comedies attracted large audiences in France (providing
a welcome distraction from the country's economic and political woes)
and most of these had nothing like the production values and volume of gags that
Carné's film offered. With such big name actors as Michel
Simon, Louis Jouvet, Françoise Rosay and Jean-Pierre Aumont,
you'd have thought the film was an irresistible proposition. One
reason that is often given for the film's failure was that its humour
was too Anglo-Saxon, but a more plausible explanation is that it was
just too sophisticated for its time. Most French film comedies of
this era adhered to a low-grade Feydeau formula, tedious farces with
the same stock situations and oft-repeated gags.
Drôle de drame is quite
different - a feisty melange of farce, barbed satire and black comedy
that is several notches above the standard French comedy. The
fact that audiences and critics failed en masse to get the joke says
far more about them than it does about the film. No one who
watches
Drôle de drame
today can fail to find it hilarious. It is one of
the funniest films ever made.
And not only is
Drôle de drame
funny, it is an exceptionally well-crafted piece of
cinema. Marcel Carné was just 29 when he made the film but
already, with just one feature under his belt, he appears to have the
skill and confidence of a seasoned professional, using the camera not
merely to tell a story but to draw us into the world that he projects
onto the screen - on this occasion, a fairly convincing recreation of
Edwardian England. In this, he is ably assisted by a remarkable
team of technicians, of whom the most distinguished was the great
German cinematographer Eugen Schüfftan. A former
collaborator of Fritz Lang (for whom he invented a process which
combined live action with model sets), Schüfftan would
subsequently work with Carné on
Le
Quai des brumes (1938), contributing much to that film's
doom-laden atmosphere. It was on
Drôle de drame that
Carné began his association with two other great creative
talents: the composer Maurice Jaubert and art designer Alexandre
Trauner, who would have a significant impact on many of his subsequent
films.
As excellent as the film is from a technical and artistic point of view, what sells it
is the quantity of humour that Prévert packs into his screenplay
and the sheer unbridled eccentricity of the performances from the
principal cast. If Marcel Carné had made up his cast
from the inmates of a lunatic asylum he could not have ended up with a
more unhinged collection than what we have here - Michel Simon as the
potty botanist posing as a morbid crime writer, Louis Jouvet as the
stony-faced bishop with an unseemly taste for tarts and tartan, and Jean-Louis
Barrault as a madman who plays Casanova to women of a certain age when
he's not slicing up butchers. And that's not to forget
Jean-Pierre Aumont, the lovelorn milkman who delivers half of his
dairy's output to one particular household every time he pays a call on
his sweetheart (when clearly one box of Milk Tray would have
sufficed). Simon and Jouvet may not have seen eye to eye (which
is a polite way of saying they loathed each other) but their scenes
together are the funniest the film has to offer. For the famous
Bizarre, bizarre sequence, they
both ended up becoming totally inebriated as a result of a bet - it
took a full day to shoot the scene and on each take they insisted on
drinking real champagne. Jouvet came off worst as he had to
appear on stage in a play later that same day. Neither
performance suffered as a result.
It was the commercial failure of
Drôle
de drame that undoubtedly dissuaded Carné and
Prévert from attempting another comedy together. In fact
Carné would only direct two other comedies in his entire career
-
Le Pays, d'où je viens
(1956) and
Du mouron pour les petits
oiseaux (1962) - neither of which is particularly well thought
of. Carné's forte was romantic drama, and it was in this
genre that he would excel and deliver some of the greatest of all
French films, assisted by his formidable screenwriter Jacques
Prévert. Carné's next film
Le Quai des brumes (1938) would
prove to be both a commercial and critical success and was the first in
a series of extraordinary cinematic monuments that would confer
immortality on their director and accompany France through her darkest hour.
Imagine what we might have lost if
Drôle
de drame had been a success...
© James Travers 2011
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Next Marcel Carné film:
Hôtel du Nord (1938)