Film Review
Goupi mains rouges was the
film that put director Jacques Becker on the map and immediately
established him as one of the leading French filmmakers during the
Occupation.
Becker had started out as an assistant to Jean
Renoir, on such films as
Boudu sauvé des eaux
(1932) and
La Grande illusion (1937),
before making his directing debut with
L'Or du Cristobal (1939), a film
which he had to abandon when he was called up to serve in the French
army at the outbreak of World War II. His next film,
Dernier atout (1942), a gangster
parody, was fairly well received, but it was with his third feature,
Goupi mains rouges, that Becker
came to be considered one of the most important French film directors
of his generation. Outside France, the film is far less
well-known than Becker's subsequent great films but it occupies an
essential place in his oeuvre, presaging the auteur masterpieces that
would surely follow.
Goupi mains rouges is based on
a novel of the same title by the writer Pierre Véry, who worked
closely with Becker on the screenplay. At the time, Véry
was a highly successful crime writer, and two of his novels had
previously been adapted to great success -
Les Disparus de Saint-Agil
(1938) and
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
(1941).
In bringing Véry's book to the big screen, Becker
provides a mischievous, if not overtly contemptuous, commentary on the
specious impression of rural life which the Vichy government had been
keen to promulgate. Far from toeing the Pétainist line
that country folk represented the traditional values of France,
selflessly slaving away in the interests of their community and their
country,
Goupi main rouges
offers up a far from flattering caricature - one that was much nearer
the truth than the fantasy that Marshal Pétain wished everyone
to believe.
From the outset, the Goupis appear to be the stereotypical peasant
family - insular, distrustful of outsiders, living by their own laws
and riven by petty differences. The comicbook characterisation is
at odds with the film's almost neo-realist presentation and the film
seems to be torn between being an authentic documentary on rural life
and the wickedest satire. The end result is truly weird, deeply
unsettling and yet irresistibly funny. As exaggerated as
the characters initially appear, they soon
acquire a measure of reality and it isn't long before the spectator is
drawn into their hermetically sealed little universe. Insular
Voodoo-practising yokels with a pathological dislike of strangers and
the police, the Goupis could hardly be further from the model that
Pétain was so eager to promote and from which French society was
to take its cue. So much for
Travail, famille, patrie! The
Goupis' slogan was far more likely to be:
Every Man For Himself!
Given the film's overt anti-Pétanist subtext, it is surprising
(if not downright miraculous) that it managed to escape censure and
ended up being well-received by both the critics and cinemagoing
public. Compare this with the fate of H.G. Clouzot's
Le
Corbeau (1943), which offered a similarly scathing attack on
French society during the Occupation. Whereas Becker's film was
widely praised as wholesome satire, Clouzot's was considered dangerous
anti-French propaganda and would be banned after the Liberation, its
director placed unceremoniously on a blacklist.
Goupi mains rouges and
Le Corbeau had a similar hidden
agenda, to expose the hollowness of the Pétainist lie that
Nazi-occupied France was a nation that was happy and
unified. That Becker's film succeeded and caused less of a
brouhaha than Clouzot's is probably down to the fact that it employed
the razor-sharp scalpel of satire, rather than the blunt mallet of
drama. Or maybe it was because Becker threw in a
bottom-covering escape clause at the end of the film. Mains
Rouges's belated
apologia for
the Goupi clan is clearly nothing more than a Pétanist-pleasing
sop, added to placate the censors and keep Becker in a job.
For anyone whose exposure to Jacques Becker is limited to the
director's classic masterpieces -
Casque d'or (1952),
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954)
and
Le
Trou (1960) -
Goupi mains
rouges will come as something of a surprise. It is a film
which practically defies classification, and yet it skilfully blends
together elements of romantic melodrama, farce and murder mystery into
an impossibly satisfying whole. Becker's mise-en-scène is
characteristically restrained, the film deriving most of its energy from
its magnificent (and very nearly certifiable) ensemble cast.
With his matinee idol good looks Georges Rollin is every inch the
outsider, the Goupi who doesn't belong, when placed alongside the more
roughly hewn Arthur Devère and Fernand Ledoux, who are both so
quaintly rustic that you can almost smell the damp grass and cow dung
on their boots. Germaine Kerjean has a formidable presence
as the tyrannical Goupi Tizanne (is there any significance in the fact
that she resembles a Nazi, governing the other Goupis with a barbed
tongue and a ready whip?). How much more satisfying that this
fire-breathing beldam should be put out of the way instead of the
endearing Goupi L'Empereur, charmingly played by the spry 75-year-old
Maurice Schutz, a talented character actor who started out in the
silent era, appearing in such films as Carl Theodor Dreyer's
La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc
(1928). Robert Le Vigan has no difficulty winning the award
(by several miles) for the most over-the-top performance. As the
wonderfully deranged Goupi Tonkin, Le Vigan makes chewing the carpet an
art in its own right, particularly as his character goes from mildly
weird to utterly unhinged in less time than it takes to change a light
bulb.
Whereas too many of Jacques Becker's later films would tend to wrap
themselves in cosy conformity, sticking perhaps too rigidly to the
norms of acceptable melodrama,
Goupi
mains rouges is an altogether different proposition, a
subversive tour de force into virgin territory which cannot fail to
take you by surprise. It is hard to know exactly how contemporary
French audiences reacted to the film, whether they warmed to its
anti-Pétanist satire or were merely entertained by its heady
concoction of farce and whodunit. The film is certainly one of
Becker's most inspired and enjoyable offerings, taking risks not only
with its subject but also with its unconventional mix of themes.
It may not be as groundbreaking as
Touchez
pas au grisbi or as intensely poetic as
Casque d'Or, but
Goupi mains rouges has its own
singular appeal and deserves its reputation as one of the most
important French films of the Occupation.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Becker film:
Falbalas (1945)