Film Review
And who better than Louis Jouvet to play the part of the leading drama
instructor? A renowned actor of stage and screen, Jouvet has a
natural authority and leaves us in no doubt that he knows of what he
speaks, although his character (a rather pompous and vain thesp of the
old school) is far from sympathetic, a caricature of Jouvet
himself.
Surrounding Jouvet is a chorus made up of highly
talented young actors, most of whom are sadly all but forgotten
today. Janine Darcey is stunning as the fragile, kind-hearted
Isabelle, the perfect contrast to Odette Joyeux's vixen-like
Cécilia. Claude Dauphin is perhaps a little too long in
the tooth to be entirely convincing as the student actor, but his charisma and
boyish charms make him an obvious choice for the part of the naïve
lover boy François. Other familiar faces to watch
out for include Bernard Blier, Noël Roquevert, Roger Blin and
Julien Carette. Marcel Dalio almost steals the final act as an
investigating magistrate - it is incredible to think that his scenes
were re-shot with another actor once Dalio had been fingered as a Jew
during the Nazi Occupation. (Fortunately, the scenes with Dalio
were reinstated after the war.)
The film revolves around an aspiring drama student Isabelle (Janine Darcey) who
is sent to seventh heaven when she wins a place at France's leading drama school,
the Conservatoire. Isabelle's talents are soon noticed by her drama
teacher, Professor Lambertin (Jouvet), who takes a kindly interest in her
on hearing that she must give up her studies to help in the running of her
adopted parents' laundrette. Isabelle's guardians are of the opinion
that acting is not an honest profession, but the good professor manages
to convince them otherwise, assuring them that the girl has the makings
of a fine actress. Resuming her studies, Isabelle has her first
serious love affair when she falls under the spell of an older
student, François. The latter has a reputation as a lady's man, and
his former girlfriend Cécilia is far from pleased when
she learns that he has found himself another love interest. Overcome
with jealousy, she intends using her acting skills to inflict a cruel and deadly revenge
on her unfaithful ex-lover. Expect a pretty grim denouement.
Entrée des artistes was
to be one of Marc Allégret's most personal films, primarily
because it dealt with a subject that was very close to his heart.
Allégret had a legendary knack for spotting and nurturing
talent, and French cinema owes him a great deal. Among the many
great actors that Marc Allégret plucked from obscurity and set
on the way to stardom are: Raimu, Michèle Morgan, Gérard
Philipe, Jean-Paul Belmondo and Louis Jourdan. Intelligently
scripted by Henri Jeanson and André Cayatte,
Entrée des artistes is not
only one of Allégret's more inspired, more humane films, it is
also one of cinema's most insightful tributes to the acting profession,
a classic in the true sense of the word.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Marc Allégret film:
Orage (1938)
Film Synopsis
One of the high points of director Marc Allégret's career,
Entrée des artistes offers
both a compelling melodrama and a rare insight into the training of
actors at France's leading drama school, the Paris Conservatoire.
The first half of the film functions almost as a documentary and covers
both the gruelling entrance exam (in which wannabe actors must perform
in front of a hard-to-please panel, like Christians entering the lions'
den) and meticulous re-enactments of drama lessons. It is this
half of the film that is of most interest - what comes afterwards is a
pretty conventional (and slightly far-fetched) piece of circa 1940
melodrama. Not only does this offer sound advice to any budding
actor (always respect the text, always find the truth in the character
you are playing), it is also performed and staged so authentically that
you could easily mistake it for a fly-on-the-wall documentary.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.