Film Review
The case of the Courrier of Lyon was one of the great causes célèbres
of the French Revolution, an infamous miscarriage of justice that inspired
several novels, plays and films.
For many years, the wrongful execution
(by guillotine) of an innocent man supported the arguments of those who argued
for the abolition of the death penalty in France, although it wasn't until
1981 that capital punishment was finally consigned to history, one of the
first acts of the Mitterrand presidency.
L'Affaire du courrier de
Lyon (1937) is the film that most faithfully recounts the incident and
most effectively argues against the death penalty. Indeed, Pierre Blanchar's
repeated protests at the film's horrific climax - 'Je suis innocent!
Je suis innocent!
Je suis innocent!' - stay with you long after
the film is over.
The film was based on a stage play of the same title by Paul Siraudin and
Louis-Mathurin Moreau, which had previously been adapted by Albert Capellani
in 1911 and Léon Poirier in 1923. The tragic turn of events begins on
27th April 1796, in the fourth year of the newly created French Republic. On
this fateful day, a mail coach is on its way from Lyon to Paris when it is ambushed by a party
of robbers on horseback. After brutally killing the coachman and a
guard, the bandits manage to get away with a small fortune in banknotes destined
for the French army in Italy. Not long afterwards, four members of
the gang are arrested when they try to pass on the stolen banknotes.
One of the four is Couriol, an acquaintance of the wealthy idler Joseph Lesurques.
On hearing of Couriol's arrest, Lesurques makes an attempt to have him released
from prison, so convinced is he that his friend is incapable of murder.
As he does so, Lesurques is positively identified as the leader of the gang
by two women who work at an inn visited by the robbers. When further
witnesses testify against Lesurques, Judge Daubenton has no choice but to
have him arrested and tried along with the others. What no one realises
is that Lesurques has an exact double and that the man who planned and led
the robbery, Dubosc, is still at liberty. To clear his name, Lesurques
reveals that on the day of the crime he was in the company of his mistress.
No one believes his story, and even when two of Dubosc's criminal associates
protest his innocence it seems that there is no hope he will escape the guillotine.
The denouement has a frightening inevitability about it, but it still comes as a shock,
and the dry coda that follows cannot fail to leave a sour after-taste.
L'Affaire du courrier de Lyon was the first of three
films that Claude Autant-Lara directed in collaboration with Maurice Lehmann
(although Lehmann takes the sole director's credit). Immediately prior
to this, Autant-Lara had directed one solo feature,
Ciboulette (1933),
but this proved to be a spectacular flop and effectively derailed a promising
directing career. To continue making films, Autant-Lara went into partnership
with Lehmann, a prominent theatre director who was keen to make his mark
on the cinema. After
L'Affaire du courrier de Lyon, the two
men made two further films together,
Le
Ruisseau (1938) and
Fric-frac
(1939), after which Autant-Lara resumed his solo career with
The Mysterious
Mr. Davis (1939) and
Le
Mariage de Chiffon (1941).
Those familiar with Autant-Lara's later work - in particular his dark satire
Douce (1943) and black comedy
L'Auberge rouge (1951) -
can hardly fail to recognise his distinctive imprint on
L'Affaire du courrier
de Lyon, particularly the warped irony lying just beneath the surface.
The compelling tale of a man wrongly arrested, tried and executed for a crime
he did not commit was scripted by two of French cinema's great screenwriters,
Jacques Prévert (known for the poetic realist masterpieces he created
with Marcel Carné) and Jean Aurenche (his first of many collaborations
with Autant-Lara). With a distinguished cast at his disposal - headed
by stars Pierre Blanchar and Dita Parlo - Autant-Lara could hardly put a
foot wrong. The staging of the robbery is masterfully executed and
Blanchar's slow march towards the scaffold makes gripping viewing.
The presence of such colourful character actors as Dorville, Jean Tissier
and Charles Dullin adds to the grim reality of the production, as well as
some subtle shards of exceedingly dark humour. Dullin's character -
a blind man whose testimony finally convinces the leading magistrate in the
affair of Blanchar's guilt - imprints itself on our mind as a potent symbol
of a judicial system that is not only deaf but also blind. There were
many subsequent films made in France arguing against the death penalty -
André Cayatte's
Nous sommes tous
des assassins (1952), José Giovanni's
Deux hommes dans la ville
(1973) and Michel Drach's
Le
Pull-over rouge (1979) - but none of these has quite the impact of
Autant-Lara's
L'Affaire du courrier de Lyon. As your trusty
reviewer completes this article his head still echoes with the cries of the
wrongly convicted man. 'Je suis innocent! Je suis innocent!
Je suis innocent!'
© James Travers 2016
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Next Claude Autant-Lara film:
Le Ruisseau (1938)