Film Review
Feu Mathias Pascal was the
third film that Marcel L'Herbier made for his production company
Cinégraphic, which had been founded in 1922 by Russian
émigré Alexandre Kamenka.
It followed
Résurrection (1923), which
L'Herbier was forced to abandon when he contracted typhoid, and the
director's avant-garde masterpiece
L'Inhumaine
(1924). The film is closely based on the novel
Il fu Mattia Pascal by the eminent
Italian author and playwright Luigi Pirandello, the first of his works
to be adapted for the cinema. The same novel has subsequently
been adapted, less successfully, as
L'Homme de nulle part (1937) by
Pierre Chenal and
Le Due vite di
Mattia Pascal (1985) by Mario Monicelli.
By the time L'Herbier made
Feu
Mathias Pascal, one of his most ambitious films, he had already
established himself as one of France's leading film directors, renowned for
making quality films with a distinctive visual flair.
Along with Abel Gance and Jean Epstein, L'Herbier was one of the great
experimentalists of French cinema, but his films also had immense
popular appeal, because they embraced subjects which a mainstream
cinema audience could easily engage with.
Feu Mathias Pascal is by far the
most conventional and accessible of L'Herbier's silent films, an
enjoyable mélange of farce and melodrama that shows a much
lighter side to the director than is seen in his better known
works. The film's exuberant comedy evokes something of Ernst
Lubitsch's early silent films, and many of the gags would not be out of
place in a Buster Keaton or Marx Brothers film - for instance, the one
where the hero rips off the initials on his hat and deposits them,
appropriately, in a letter box.
Almost as a homage to the great cinematic magician Georges
Méliès, Lherbier employs the camera trickery that he had
perfected in his earlier films for purely comical effect. Double
exposure allows the reborn Mathias Pascal to confront his former self,
whilst slow motion is used, à la Sam Peckinpah, for a scene in
which the hero imagines himself attacking his romantic rival.
Even the dream sequences appear to be a humorous parody of those seen
in previous silent films. In contrast to some of
L'Herbier's earlier films, which are drenched in self-conscious
artistry, this one is far more understated, and therein lies its
charm. Having mastered his art, L'Herbier is far less consumed by
the need to prove himself. Instead of prostrating himself on the
altar of cinematic art, he devotes himself to a humbler and perhaps
worthier cause, diverting his audience and bringing a little sunshine
into the world. What is perhaps most striking about this film
is its deliberate rejection of stylisation and artifice - it possesses a naturalism that is
at times intensely evocative of Italian neo-realism, most noticeably in the beautifully shot exterior
location sequences.
Of course, it takes far more than a great director to make a great
film, and L'Herbier's own contribution to
Feu Mathias Pascal is matched by
that of his leading man, the legendary actor Ivan Mozzhukhin.
Having found fame in his native Russia, Mozzhukhin went on to become
one of the leading stars of French cinema in the 1920s. With his
striking good looks and magnetic charm, the actor was France's answer
to Rudolph Valentino, eagerly sought-after by many notable filmmakers
of the time. He headlined Viktor Tourjansky's
Michel Strogoff (1926) and
Alexandre Volkoff's
Casanova
(1927), and also showed great promise as a writer and director with
Le Brasier ardent (1923).
Mozzhukhin's arresting star presence, together with his flair for
downbeat comedy and an ability to convey intense inner emotional
conflict beneath an apparently cool exterior, is perhaps what most
makes
Feu Mathias Pascal such
a compelling and rewarding film. Another cinema giant, Michel
Simon, appears in the film in one of his early supporting roles,
stealing each of his scenes with a mischievous twinkle.
Another of the film's strengths is its impressive design, which is
the work of two other cinema greats, Lazare Meerson and Alberto
Cavalcanti. This was Meerson's first engagement as a designer; he
would subsequently have an immense impact on early French cinema
through his collaborations with directors René Clair, Jacques
Feyder and Abel Gance, working on such films as
L'Argent
(1928),
Sous les Toits de Paris (1930)
and
La Kermesse héroïque
(1935). Cavalcanti not only distinguished himself as a set
designer but would later become a film director in his own right,
helming such classics as
Captain Fracasse (1929),
Went the Day Well? (1942) and
Champagne Charlie (1944).
Although
Feu Mathias Pascal
was a commercial and critical success in its time, today it is
generally less well regarded than L'Herbier's other great works.
This can largely be put down to artistic snobbery, since the film
offers far less visual innovation than L'Herbier is known for and
adheres more rigidly to the principles of conventional screen
narrative. The film may lack the inspired stylisation of
L'Herbier's masterworks -
Eldorado (1921),
L'Inhumaine (1924) and
L'Argent (1928) - but this does not
preclude it from being a cinematic tour de force. Here the
director displays not only his talent for experimentation, admittedly
on a more modest scale than his devotees might wish for, but also an
extraordinary capacity for telling a complex story in an engaging
fashion, without resorting to the narrative sleight of hand to which
many of his contemporaries were prone.
Feu Mathias Pascal is epic in scale
and yet intimate in detail, balancing its moments of humour and
poignancy with a rare delicacy and warmth. No one should be put off by
the film's daunting three hour run-time. This is assuredly the most
humane and humorous of all Marcel L'Herbier's films.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Marcel L'Herbier film:
L'Argent (1928)