Film Review
Before he came to acquire a reputation as one of the standard bearers of the
quality tradition of French cinema, director Jean Delannoy lent his
talents to a diverse range of films, including some in which quality is
in distinctly short supply. Among the latter is the paradoxically
titled
Fièvres, a
tepid melodrama in which the globally renowned chansonnier Tino Rossi (then at the
height of his popularity) tries and fails to convince the world he can
act. This is one of Delannoy's least known and least well
regarded works, and it is not hard to see why when it is compared with
his subsequent great films -
L'Éternel Retour
(1943),
La Symphonie pastorale (1946),
Les jeux sont faits (1947),
etc. The poetry and dramatic power of the work for which
Delannoy is now remembered are conspicuous by their absence in much of his his early work.
Rossi's contribution aside, the main reason why
Fièvres
fails to impress is its ramshackle plot, which feels like a lazily
assembled compendium of ideas ripped from other film melodramas of this
era. It doesn't help that the characters are shallow and mostly
unconvincing, although there are some strong performances from Rossi's
co-stars, notably Madeleine Sologne and Ginette Leclerc. You
sense throughout the film that Delannoy's heart wasn't really in it -
his direction lacks the inspired touch of his better films of this era
and some sequences look positively amateurish. Rossi also looks
pretty bored with the whole thing and his performance is more listless
and unengaging than usual, although he is back on form with the film's
musical numbers, which include his hit
Maria. Of course, the main
justification for watching a Tino Rossi film is to hear the legendary
tenor sing his heart out, and in this department at least
Fièvres delivers the goods.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Jean Delannoy film:
L'Assassin a peur la nuit (1942)
Film Synopsis
A man on the run from the police takes refuge in a monastery where one
of the monks takes pity on him and tells him the story of Brother
Marco. Twenty years previously, Marco was a successful singer
under the name Jean Dupray. Although happily married to Maria, he
pursued an affair with a wealthy American socialite which led to his
wife's premature death. Heartbroken, Jean have up his singing
career and sought anonymity in a small village in the south of
France. Not long after Jean has settled into his new life, the
wife of his best friend attempts to seduce him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.