Film Review
Between
Le Retour de Don Camillo and
Marianne de ma jeunesse,
director Julien Duvivier made
L'Affaire
Maurizius, a Franco-Italian crime-drama based on a 1928 book by
Jakob Wasserman. The script of this little-known film was
constructed from interviews, statements and reports concerning a famous
miscarriage of justice. Accused of the murder of his wife, a man
is given a life prison sentence because he was up against a ruthless
prosecutor who did not care much for the truth. The man must now
face his own son, who is charged with uncovering all the secrets of the
case.
Duvivier was not interested in making a suspense thriller or a
whodunit. He is more concerned with showing a personal and dark
vision of humankind through the inhumanity of the judicial system; it
is a theme that would have suited the filmmaker André
Cayatte. Never before has Duvivier shown us such a darkly
pessimistic view of man and society. In this twisted amoral
fairytale, no one is capable of being saved.
In one of his most experimental films, Duvivier employs a
mise-en-scène that is far from conventional for this kind of
drama. Past and present are filmed in bare, unfinished sets:
closed streets with walls made of black panels, big empty rooms in
which the actors are playing with barely existent objects.
As in the early expressionist films, the sets are designed to reflect
the inner moods of the protagonists. For example, the prison cell
serves to remind Maurizius of the time that has passed since his trial;
his father's apartment suggests a character who has become trapped by
his resentment and hatred.
We can perhaps reproach Duvivier for not exercising more control over
his actors, who sometimes show a tendency to overact. Up and
coming star of the 1950s, Daniel Gélin may have been inspired
by the sets but his performance as the main character is a tad
theatrical. Charles Vanel (already used by Duvivier in
La
Belle équipe) is perfect in a less nuanced role, as a
hard and cruel man. Sadly, the magnificent Madeleine Robinson has
an underwritten part, even though her character plays a pivotal role in
the story. Likewise, the lovely Italian actress Eleonora Rossi
Drago plays a crucial part that is barely skimmed over in the
film.
The biggest disappointment comes from the great Anton Walbrook
(admirable in Max Ophüls' films
La Ronde and
Lola
Montès) who verges on ridicule in a grotesque and
dreadful role. Duvivier's disturbing commentary on blind justice
can be seen by some as a minor and disappointing work; by others, as a
lucid film which has the greatness of a Greek tragedy. In any
event,
L'Affaire Maurizius is
the most bitter jewel in the director's
career.
© James Travers, Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Julien Duvivier film:
Marianne de ma jeunesse (1955)
Film Synopsis
Wolf Andergast began his illustrious career as a magistrate eighteen years
ago with a murder case that resulted in a young man, Léonard Maurizius,
being sent to prison for life. Andergast's son Etzel now has good reason
to believe in Maurizius's innocence and sets out on his own investigation
to uncover the truth. It seems that Maurizius's conviction for the
murder of his wife Élisabeth hinged on the possibly flawed testimony
of one crucial witness, Grégoire Waremme, a man who now lives under
an assumed name at a boarding house in Zurich.
After gaining the old man's confidence, Etzel manages to get Waremme to tell
his story. It seems he was in love with Élisabeth's sister Anna
and it was Anna, not Maurizius, who committed the crime after a violent row.
Unable to stand by and watch the woman he loved be condemned for a crime
of passion, Waremme felt compelled to give false evidence at Maurizius's
trial. The matter now tidily resolved, Etzel arranges for the wrongly
convicted man to be set free, but Maurizius has by this time given up the
will to live...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.