Film Review
It is a popular misconception that all French films made during the
Occupation were bleak, sombre affairs that tended to wallow in the
misery of the time.
Je suis
avec toi is a film of this era that instantly dispels this
notion and looks more like an American screwball comedy of the 1930s
than something that came out of France in its darkest hour. It is
the kind of frivolous crowdpleaser you can imagine Howard Hawks or
Preston Sturges turning out (indeed the plot clearly nods towards
George Cukor's
Two-Faced Woman
(1941), Greta Garbo's swansong), so it's a surprise to discover that it
was in fact directed by Henri Decoin, who is more associated with
brooding melodramas than light comedies. Decoin's other
Occupation era films include such moody dramas as
Le
Bienfaiteur (1942) and
Les Inconnus dans la maison
(1942), which are far more typical of his oeuvre and far closer to what
you would expect for a film of this period.
Looking every inch the classic Hollywood couple (Fred and Ginger spring
instantly to mind), Yvonne Printemps and Pierre Fresnay both look as if
they are pumped full of steroids as they waltz through this comedy
marathon. Married in real life, Printemps and Fresnay starred
alongside one another in eight films, of which
Je suis avec toi is the fifth and,
arguably, most entertaining. After appearing together in a stodgy
melodrama -
Le Duel (1939), the one film
directed by Fresnay - they return to the unbridled gaiety of
Trois
valses (1938), one of their biggest successes. With a
better script and better director, this frenetic comedy outshines its
predecessor and gives Fresnay more opportunity to do something he very
rarely did, namely to make his audience roar with laughter. Every
cosy love nest must have a cuckoo and in this instance the role of the
unwelcome gooseberry is enjoyably fulfilled by Bernard Blier, hilarious
in one of his earliest tour de force comedy performances. Blier's
presence brings more than a touch of class to what might otherwise have
been a very silly rom-com.
Showing an almost manic lack of restraint throughout,
Je suis avec toi goes completely
off the rails when Fresnay and Printemps go on an amusement binge at
Luna Park. The wild editing and dizzying point-of-view shots
taken from various amusement rides create a head-spinning sense of
exhilaration. These, together with the obvious chemistry of the
two leads, provides an extraordinarily vivid impression of amorous
intoxication, which reaches its peak when the film's main number,
Vertige d'un soir, bursts from
Printemps' lungs. Released just before Christmas 1943,
Je suis avec toi is exactly the
kind of exuberant pick-me-up that French cinema audiences would have
relished in the dark days of occupation. You only have to watch
Fresnay's previous film, the relentlessly pessimistic
Le
Corbeau, to see how things really were and why breezy madcap
comedies like Decoin's were such an essential part of life in occupied
France. Forget religion,
comedy
is the real opium of the people.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Henri Decoin film:
L'Homme de Londres (1943)
Film Synopsis
As she is on her way to New York by ocean liner to sort out an
inheritance, Elisabeth La Ferrière is convinced that her husband
François will take advantage of her absence to start an
extramarital affair. Having taken the first flight back to
France, she checks into the hotel where her husband is staying with his
friend Robert and passes herself off as another woman, Irène,
when she meets him. Completely taken in by this deception,
François and Robert are soon competing for Irène's
attentions. Elisabeth's doubts about her husband's fidelity are
soon borne out, as François takes her as his mistress. It
is not long before François begins to suspect the truth, and
Elisabeth has to exercise all her cunning to prevent her little scheme
from coming unravelled...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.