Film Review
L'Arbre de Noël (a.k.a.
The Christmas Tree) is a
deceptively simple film that deals sensitively with one of the most
difficult subjects of all - how to face up to one's own mortality and
the mortality of those nearest to us. A thoughtful adaptation of
Michel Bataille's popular novel of the same title, it is a film which
is suitable for both adults and children, handling its brutal subject
matter with surprising finesse and maturity. When the film was
first released, critics were quick to pick up on the obvious flaws in
both the writing and the direction, with the result that the film has
languished in comparative obscurity for many years and still remains an
overlooked classic.
L'Arbre de
Noël is not the most polished of films, and it does
occasionally get snared up on its unnecesary didacticism, but for all
its faults it is an extremely poignant piece of drama and remains one
of cinema's most stirring and accessible meditations on mortality.
The film was directed by Terence Young, the well-known British
filmmaker whose previous mainstream successes included the first (and
best) James Bond movies,
Dr No (1962) and
From Russia with Love
(1963). Young's flair for action set-pieces is apparent in
the film's most dramatic sequence (in which the boy protagonist is
attacked by a mad horse and saved by his precious wolves), but it is
the quieter, more contemplative scenes that are the most effective and
memorable. The sequence in which the boy's father is forced
to reveal his son's fate to his friend and then learns that his son
knows he is going to die is the most touching in the film, particularly
as it is played with an almost brutal restraint. There are one or two
scenes where the emotionality is perhaps nudged a little too far, but
overall Young manages to avoid the kind of gratuitous heartstring
tugging that is prevalent in comparable Hollywood tearjerkers.
Where the film does get lachrymose, it does so with sufficient force to
make even the most stonyhearted cynic shed a tear or two. It's
not advisable to watch this film unless you have a box of Kleenex
within easy reach.
For lead actor William Holden,
L'Arbre
de Noël - along with Sam Peckinpah's
The Wild Bunch, released a few
months previously - represented a significant return to from, after a
period of some years in which he was reduced to playing minor
parts. Holden is as perfect in this film as he is in Peckinpah's,
and his portrayal of a father coming to terms with the fact that his
son has just a few months left to live should be considered one of his
finest. Watching a persona as tough as Holden's crack in the face
of personal tragedy is indeed a harrowing sight to behold.
In one of his last screen roles, the popular comic actor Bourvil also
turns in a fine dramatic performance, one that is subtly moving and
humorous, an effective counterpoint to Holden's darkly introspective
portrayal. It is worth noting that before he made the
film, Bourvil had been diagnosed with Kahler's disease,
a bone-wasting cancer that would claim his life within a year of the film's
release.
As great as Holden and Bourvil are in this film, each powerfully
evoking the bitter poignancy of his character's predicament, it is
ten-year-old Brook Fuller who steals the film as the doomed infant
Pascal. What makes the film so devastatingly poignant is Pascal's
quiet acceptance of his fate; he knows he is going to die and yet it
appears not to spoil his enjoyment of the life that remains to
him. Fuller's performance is charming and authentic, untainted by
the cocksure self-awareness that seems to afflict most child actors
today. Fuller conveys far more than he can possibly be conscious
of and, more than anything, it is the spontaneity and mystique which he
brings to the film that makes it so magical and so full of meaning.
A Franco-Italian production, the film exists into two versions which
differ in a just a few scenes. For the French version (
L'Arbre de Noël), the American
actors are dubbed, whilst in the English-language version (
The Christmas Tree), Bourvil speaks
his lines in English. Both versions make effective use of Narciso
Yepes' evocative guitar theme from René Clément's 1952
film
Jeux interdits, an even
more powerful depiction of children awakening to the curse of
mortality. We can forgive Terence Young for stealing Yepes' theme
because it serves his film so perfectly and strikes just the right
emotional chord at just the right moments.
L'Arbre de Noël touches
on some themes that were highly topical when it was made (and which
continue to be relevant to this day) - anxieties over the prevalence of
atomic weaponry and whether scientific endeavour is more concerned with
national prestige than in improving the lot of mankind. The
polemic over whether governments should be investing more taxpayers'
money in medical research instead of prestige projects gained momentum
in the late 1960s as billions were siphoned into the NASA moon-landing
project, potentially setting back medical research by
decades. Should mankind's priority be to eradicate human
suffering or to push back the frontiers of knowledge in more esoteric areas? It
is a moral dilemma that continues to strain the consciences of
individuals and governments throughout the world.
Despite its bleak subject matter,
L'Arbre
de Noël is a film that is highly recommended for children,
as few other films have dealt as eloquently and pointedly with the issue
of mortality. For adults, it is just as appealing, and
surprisingly life-affirming. The film does not dwell morbidly on
the fate that awaits us all but serves as a cogent parable on the
preciousness of life, reminding us that each moment should be lived to
its fullest, whether we have just six months or sixty years head of
us. The film's ending is brutal and so heartrending that no
one who watches it can avoid being moved to tears, but it compels us to
reflect and cherish what we have, rather than lament what we must
lose. As far as Christmas films go, this one is hard to beat,
cruel as it is.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Terence Young film:
Dr. No (1962)
Film Synopsis
As has become his custom after losing his mother, ten-year-old Pascal
joins his father Laurent, a millionaire businessman, in Paris for the
summer holidays. This year, Pascal insists that they spend the
summer together in Corsica, so having bid a hasty farewell to Laurent's
girlfriend Catherine, they set out for the holiday of a lifetime.
It proves to be just that. Whilst lounging about on their raft,
father and son witness a strange sight in the sky above them. A
passing aircraft goes up in a ball of flame and a parachute laden with
an ominous-looking missile falls into the sea nearby. A few weeks
later, Pascal begins to show signs of a mysterious illness. His
father takes him to a medical expert and has his worst fears
confirmed. Having been subjected to a blast of atomic radiation,
Pascal has contracted leukaemia and has only six months to live,
perhaps a little longer if he stays in hospital and subjects himself to
extensive treatment. Laurent makes up his mind to take Pascal to
his country home and give him the best six months of life a boy can
possibly have, with the help of his old army friend Verdun. As
his father spoils him with presents and other treats, Pascal begins to
develop a deep fascination for wild wolves. Knowing that nothing
can make his son happier than owning a pet wolf, Laurent resolves to
make this dream come true, even if he has to break into a zoo and steal
the wolf himself...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.