Film Review
Between
Le Doulos (1962) and
Le Deuxième souffle
(1966), two seminal French policiers, director Jean-Pierre Melville
stepped outside the gangster milieu for which he had a particular
penchant to make this suitably gloomy adaptation of a Georges Simenon
novel.
L'Aîné des
Ferchaux is one of the few films made by Melville which do not
fit into the two categories that predominate in his oeuvre - gangster
films and dramas about the Nazi Occupation of France, although it bears
his unmistakable imprint and is possibly the film which most loudly
shrieks his bulimic preoccupation with American culture.
Notionally a film noir, this could equally be classified as a road
movie or buddy movie, its recognisable American locations, use of
American actors and numerous references to Frank Sinatra giving it a
distinctly American flavour. Whereas Melville's gangster films
constitute a respectful homage to American cinema,
L'Aîné des Ferchaux
seems to be a more personal statement of devotion for a country and its
people, albeit one seen through the dark and twisted prism of someone
with the most jaundiced view of human nature.
That
L'Aîné
des Ferchaux feels like the odd man out in Melville's
filmography is probably down to the fact that it was one of the few films (the other being
Les Enfants terribles, 1950)
which he did not himself initiate. It was Fernand Lumbroso, a
distinguished theatre producer, who set the wheels in motion, hoping to
make his film production debut with an adaptation of Georges Simenon's
1943 novel
Un jeune homme honorable.
Lumbroso immediately envisaged Alain Delon for the role of the younger
leading protagonist; whilst Delon was interested in the project, he
withdrew at the last moment, lured away by Michelangelo Antonioni to
take the lead in
L'Eclisse (1962).
Belmondo was cast in his place and it was this actor who insisted
that Jean-Pierre Melville direct the film, even though the two men had had
an extremely strained relationship on their previous film,
Le Doulos (1962).
The first thing that Melville did was to completely refashion Simeon's
novel, to give it a more American feel. At first, he intended to
offer an account of the real-life disappearance of the American tycoon
Howard Hughes. After numerous rewrites, the film morphed into
something quite different, a drama revolving around a disillusioned
banker and go-getting younger man who develop an uncomfortable
dependency, a kind of father-son relationship, that is tainted by
mutual distrust and loathing (perhaps a reflection of Melville's own
fraught relationship with Belmondo). Being an ex-boxer himself,
Belmondo was an obvious casting choice for the part of the young boxer
Michel Maudet, but who should take the role of the older man?
Initially, Melville considered the acclaimed American film actor
Spencer Tracy and then Charles Boyer for the part. When neither
of these was available, he opted for another screen veteran of
comparable renown, Charles Vanel.
The casting of Vanel was inspired as it allowed the actor to give one
of his finest performances, but it was to prove a nightmare for the
film's production. Right from the outset, Melville and Vanel
failed to get along, and minor differences of opinion over the script
soon escalated into full-blown enmity. It was Vanel's insistence
that he be accompanied by his wife which put the mockers on Melville's
original intention to shoot the entire film in the United States.
As a result, the film had to be made in France, although a small film
crew was sent off to the USA to film a few location inserts.
Inevitably, these ructions exacerbated Belmondo's dislike for
Melville's method of working and what began as grudging mutual respect
soon developed into undisguised contempt on both sides. By the
time the filming was under way, Melville was barely on speaking terms
with either of his lead actors, and it is perhaps a small miracle
that the film was ever completed. Needless to say, neither actor
worked with Melville again afterwards.
It is a testament to the professionalism of all concerned than none of
this backstage antagonism is undetectable in the finished
product. Whatever their feelings for their director, both Vanel
and Belmondo turn in a performance of exceptional quality and
complement one another admirably. Each actor brings a subtle
pathos, humanity and dark introspection to his portrayal which masks
the apparent shortcomings in the script whilst giving the film its
unmistakable noir pungency. The film is pervaded by the same
sense of futility, macho solitariness and existential anxiety which
permeates all of Melville's gangster films, and the uneasy rapport that
develops between Vanel and Belmondo's characters is an obvious
expression of the need that men have to form relationships, however
improbable, in a cold, unfeeling universe that offers few tangible
comforts.
In 2001,
L'Aîné des
Ferchaux was remade as a film for French television, directed by
Bernard Stora and starring none other than Jean-Paul Belmondo in the
role of the fugitive millionaire Ferchaux. Belmondo's part in the
earlier film was taken by Samy Naceri, the young actor who became an
overnight star through his lead role in Gérard Pirès's 1998
film
Taxi.
Whilst
L'Aîné des
Ferchaux is
not generally as well-regarded as Melville's other films and was a
massive flop on its initial release, it represents an essential place
in his oeuvre and should not be overlooked by devotees of this great
auteur of French cinema.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jean-Pierre Melville film:
Le Deuxième souffle (1966)