Film Review
The curse of capital
Money was the bane of Marcel L'Herbier's life. 'The dung on which life
thrives' (to quote Émile Zola) was the very thing that crushed Herbier's
initial grandiose aspirations for film art and drew him slowly but surely
away from the slippery mud-track of an avant-garde poet to the safe, rigidly
defined freeway that was commercial cinema. Herbier was not alone in
suffering this fate. His equally talented contemporaries Abel Gance,
Jean Epstein and René Clair
all went the same way to a greater or lesser extent, although their reputations
were not so badly harmed by the concessions they were forced to make as their
careers fell into decline. Clair was still considered an important
innovator during the transition to sound cinema, Epstein redeemed himself
with his lyrical
Breton studies and
Gance never let the world forget he had made possibly the greatest film of
all -
Napoléon. By the
time sound arrived L'Herbier was pretty much a spent force, his artistic
prowess burned up in less than a decade in which he achieved little commercial
success.
In a world in which Marcel L'Herbier had access to limitless resources he
would have flourished like no other filmmaker, but in the real world where
money decides everything he was doomed to be corralled into the crushing
mediocrity of mainstream convention. The accomplished
artiste innovateur
who turned filmmaking into a wondrously dynamic fine art in the early 1920s
with such stunning impressionistic masterworks as
El Dorado (1921) and
L'Inhumaine (1924) became little
more than a journeyman hack by the mid-1930s. Only the merest handful
of the sound films he made over a 23 year period (
La Route impériale,
Les Hommes nouveaux,
Nuits de feu,
La Nuit fantastique,
La Vie de bohème) show
anything more than a faint glimmering of true artistic merit. The rest
are almost totally forgettable and have - rightly - been forgotten, with
the result that L'Herbier is now widely considered to be an exclusively silent
filmmaker. And all this was down to money, or rather, the extreme lack
of it. The constantly impecunious L'Herbier detested money more than
anything in the world, and it was his abject, unremitting hatred of filthy
lucre (helped by his left-leaning politics) that compelled him to make what
is unquestionably his greatest film -
L'Argent, cinema's most deliriously
virulent assault on the world of high finance.
Marcel L'Herbier's decision to attempt a screen adaptation of a major work
of French literature - Émile Zola's
L'Argent (book 18 in the
famous Rougon-Macquart saga) - was in itself a massive compromise, not something
the director would have bothered with had he been financially independent.
Adapting a novel was a concession to popular tastes that was entirely contrary
to his original conception of cinema. The craze for adaptations of
literary works began in 1908 with an attempt by Pathé and Film d'Art
to bring bourgeois respectability to the new medium of cinema. A decade
later, in the face of a fierce onslaught from the burgeoning American film
industry, adaptations of well-known plays and novels came to dominate French
cinema, to the extent that variety and innovation withered, thus further
diminishing France's place in the industry. What happened next was
an almost exact parallel to what would happen thirty years later with the
advent of the French New Wave.
A new wave of realism
In the early 1920s, a loose collection of cinema critics, film theorists,
screenwriters and rookie filmmakers united in their distress over French
cinema's rapidly shrinking scope and importance. They began advocating an
alternative that was based on original scenarios and a dramatic break from
the predominantly action-oriented, objective approach to film narrative that
had become the inviolable norm. This first wave of Avant-Garde rebels
comprised some illustrious names - Louis Delluc, Germaine Dulac, Marcel L'Herbier,
Abel Gance, Jean Epstein and René Clair - all of whom were committed
to exploring and extending the subjective potential in cinematic expression.
Termed 'the French impressionists' (as their ideas were seen to be complementary
to those of the German expressionists), their experiments with lighting,
camera effects, subjective photography and editing techniques were motivated
by a desire to move from the outer world of events and actions to the inner
world of thought and feelings. Impressionistic cinema is a daring attempt
to capture on celluloid the constantly fluctuating psychological states of
its protagonists, allowing for a much greater degree of emotional connection
between the audience and the characters on the screen and thereby achieving
a heightened sense of reality. Going
beyond the artifice of the well-greased narrative and placing greater emphasis
on the perceptual experience of individuals - these were deemed essential for an
art form that was intended to represent the human condition as authentically
and deeply as possible.
Marcel L'Herbier's interest in pushing the envelope of film expression began
early in the 1910s when he was in his early twenties. Gripped by a
fascination for symbolist and post-symbolist literature, he began writing
plays and poems whilst trying his hand at literary criticism. Innovation
was in his blood so it was inevitable that, having received formal training
as a filmmaker in the cinematographic section of the French army during WWI,
he soon became one of the driving forces of the Parisian Avant-Garde.
It was L'Herbier's striving for complete artistic freedom on his films that
compelled him to turn his back on Gaumont (the company that allowed him to
make his first great film
El Dorado) and led him to form his own film
production company, Cinégraphic.
Almost immediately, L'Herbier found himself hamstrung by the commercial realities
of filmmaking. Such was the failure of his first completed independent
film
L'Inhumaine (1924) that he had no choice but to move on to the
much safer ground of play or book adaptations, progressively ditching his
high-minded auteur principles merely to ensure his survival in an increasingly
precarious business. The progression from
Feu Mathias Pascal (1926)
(an impressionistic tour de force) to
Le Diable au Coeur (a comparatively
mundane crowd-pleaser) is one of grudging acquiescence to mainstream conformity.
The breadth of artistic originality, the bold impressionisic tropes that
had set L'Herbier apart in his early career - all of this was in marked decline
by the time the director embarked on his most ambitious film,
L'Argent.
A marriage made in Hell
Awed by Abel Gance's historical epic
Napoléon (1927), the now
40-year-old Marcel L'Herbier was resolved to making a comparable cinematic
monument, but he knew that such a project was way beyond the limited resources
of his own virtually insolvent company. His only option was a co-production
with a much larger company, Jean Sapène's Société des
Cinéromans, which had had much greater success with its big budget
adaptations. Sapène had recently produced Henri Fescourt's incredibly
ambitious
Les Misérables (1925)
and seemed to be the ideal backer - until he insisted on a clause in the
contract allowing him the right to intervene in just about every area of
production. L'Herbier knew at once that this meant sacrificing the
thing that was dearest to him - total artistic freedom during the making
of the film - but he had no alternative but to agree to Sapène's stringent
terms.
It wasn't long before the two men came into fierce conflict, with heated
memos flying between them like poisoned darts on a daily basis. A former
press baron, Sapène had a reputation as a tyrant and was used to getting
his way. He insisted on seeing every shooting schedule and took full
advantage of his right to oversee and approve every area of production.
L'Herbier had to endure constant verbal and physical abuse and, at one point,
tensions rose so high that Sapène punched the director in the face,
almost rendering him unconscious. It soon became apparent to L'Herbier
that what he had entered into was a Faustian pact with the kind of capitalistic
devil he reviled most.
It is no accident that the director's fraught relationship with Sapène
is exactly mirrored by that of the central antagonists in
L'Argent,
Hamelin and Saccard. L'Herbier clearly identifies himself with the
exploited mild-mannered aviator who is forced, through financial necessity,
to accept the backing of the most despicable breed of businessman, a money-grubbing
vulgarian who is Jean Sapène in all but name. Just as
the heroic airman is compelled to sacrifice his self-respect (and possibly
his marriage) through his unholy alliance with a capitalistic Mephistopheles,
so L'Herbier had no option but to give up a fair chunk of his artistic integrity
so that he could fulfil his burning ambition to make his one great film.
The making of
L'Argent was just one more retelling of the famous Faust
legend, perhaps a tad nastier than the original.
By the time production on the film was over, L'Herbier and Sapène
hated each other so much that they were no longer on speaking terms.
Sapène's blazing contempt for the director was such that, between
the film's Paris première in December 1928 and its first public screening
in April 1929, he imposed a drastic series of cuts that reduced its length
by 30 minutes, without informing L'Herbier. There then ensued a public
battle between the two men, the director insisting that the edits be reversed,
the producer adamantly refusing to make even the tiniest concession.
It wasn't until four decades had passed that L'Herbier was able to reinstate
the excised sequences and allow the public to see
L'Argent in the
form he had intended.
Another matter which the director had absolutely no control over was the
casting of two leading German actors - Brigitte Helm and Alfred Abel (both
major stars thanks to the success of Fritz Lang's
Metropolis) - for two of the principal
roles; this was forced on him by the film's German distributor UFA.
The casting of Helm and Abel made commercial sense but it had the unfortunate
consequence of lending
L'Argent an overtly nationalistic, anti-German
subtext, since it is their venal characters that ultimately triumph in the
film, at the expense of the more sympathetically drawn characters played
by French actors (Pierre Alcover and Mary Glory).
L'Herbier's last hurrah
Critical reaction to
L'Argent on its first release was overall fairly
damning. A minority of reviewers professed to being greatly impressed
by certain aspects of the production, with a considerable praise being lavished
on the unusually sophisticated camerawork and artistic design, However,
many more critics disliked the film intensely, considering it overblown and
pretentious, and it was widely lambasted for not being faithful to Zola's
original text. The classic 1891 novel was set at the time of the Second
Empire, drawing on two of the most notorious crises of the 19th century -
the Paris stock market crash of 1882 and the Panama Canal scandal of 1892.
L'Herbier's film timeshifts the story to a contemporary setting, implying
that the speculative lunacy of the 1800s was still very much alive in the
1920s. (In this the film proved to be remarkably prescient, anticipating
not only the Wall Street Crash of 1929 but also the 1934
Stavisky Affair, a financial scandal of such
enormity that it brought down the French government, leading to a long period
of political instability in France). One of the film's most vociferous
critics was the retired, highly respected film director André Antoine
who deeply resented the updating of Zola's masterpiece - even though he had
taken comparable (arguably greater) liberties with his own literary adaptations,
especially
La Terre (1920) and
L'Arlésienne (1922).
L'Argent was one of the most insanely ambitious film productions of
its time. It took several months to shoot, consumed 100,000 metres
of film and cost five million francs to make (a more than fifty per cent
overspend on its original three-million franc budget!). It was folly
on an almost unprecedented scale and the chances of the film breaking even
were remote in the extreme. The mixed critical reaction to the film
resulted in mediocre box office receipts in France, although it had some
success in Germany, no doubt on the back of the immense popularity of Abel
and Helm. It did not help that the film's release coincided with the
first screenings in Europe of the first film ever to use synchronised sound,
The Jazz Singer (1927) - an
event of seismic importance for cinema.
L'Argent may have been
one of the artistic peaks of the silent era but it came out just as the public
was losing interest in silent films. Its failure at the box office
was to deliver a decisive death blow to L'Herbier's dreams of a career of
artistic independence. With the immediate demise of his company Cinégraphic,
he was reduced to being little more than just another director for hire for
the rest of his career. His days as a trailblazing cineaste and cinematic
revolutionary were well and truly over.
Although Marcel L'Herbier went on to direct one more silent film and 30 sound
films (as well as undertaking some important pioneering work for French television
in the 1950s) his best work was already behind him. He freely
admitted that
L'Argent was his last work of any significance, but
it wasn't until the 1960s that the film came to enjoy its present status
as one of the towering achievements of French silent cinema, following a
critical reappraisal by such influential film commentators as Noël Burch.
'A masterpiece of modernist cinema' is how
L'Argent
came to be regarded, garnering particular attention for its incredibly
exuberant use of camera movement, which sets it apart from most films of
its period.
L'Herbier's Ariel
As is revealed in Jean Dréville's fascinating must-see documentary
Autour de l'argent (1929) (made with the director's full support whilst
L'Argent was being shot), L'Herbier
went to extraordinary lengths to use camera motion as a means of capturing
the wild dynamism and chaotic fervour of the world of high finance.
In this he was assisted by the legendary cinematographer Jules Kruger, who
had previously collaborated with Abel Gance on
Napoléon and
would subsequently contribute to some of the most visually striking French
films of the 1930s - including Raymond Bernard's
Les Misérables (1934)
and Julien Duvivier's
Pépé
le Moko (1937). Long and elaborate tracking shots were achieved
with cameramen strapped to trolleys or placed on floating platforms that
were moved about on wires on pulleys fixed to the studio ceiling.
Gliding through space like an unencumbered spirit, the camera lens becomes
L'Herbier's Ariel, his all-seeing eye, roving wherever it chooses through
an opulent landscape of greed-driven delirium.
For the film's most dazzling and surreal shot, an automatic (self-winding)
camera is sent plummeting from the ceiling down to the ring at the very heart
of the bustling Paris stock exchange. Numerous are the scenes in which
a shoulder-mounted or hand-held camera ploughs through jam-packed crowds
of extras. There are zooms inwards and outwards and pans of breathtaking
versatility across spaces of jaw-dropping proportions, cameras arranged in
just about every conceivable position, and dissolves and fades used with
sublime artistry. The effect of all this cinematographic bravado, achieved
with an almost effortless grace, is both powerfully hypnotic and intensely
awe-inspiring.
Another noteworthy feature of
L'Argent is its imaginative use of intellectual
(or metaphorical) montage, which was no doubt inspired by Sergei Eisenstein's
application of the same editing technique on his early films
Strike (1925) and
Battleship Potemkin (1925).
In an early scene, portrait shots of Saccard in his office are inter-cut
with a shot of a statuette depicting Napoleon on a horse, leaving us in no
doubt as to the enormity of the banker's inflated ego. More startling
is the sequence in which Hamelin's plane departs for its long transatlantic
voyage. (For the film's première in December 1928, these images
would have had an even greater impact as they were accompanied by recordings
of the sound of an aeroplane taking off and the tumult of everyday activity
within the Paris Bourse.)
The plane's take-off is inter-cut several times with a bird's-eye view of
the Paris Stock Exchange, with the frenzied mass of traders seen from high
up in the cupola. Such is the intensity of the speculative furore that
you feel that the plane is being prevented from lifting off by human will
alone. The tension slowly builds as the camera moves slowly downwards
in a descending arc across the crowded floor of the Bourse, matching the
forward movement of the plane as it suddenly breaks free of its invisible
moorings and surges into the sky. In this one remarkable sequence L'Herbier
serves up what is possibly cinema's starkest representation of the eternal
conflict that has guided human civilization for millennia - the struggle
between man's aspiration to reach for the sky and his baser instincts to
bring everything down into the gutter.
A world of boundless excess
L'Herbier's penchant for deep-space mise-en-scène - refined to perfection
in his earlier L'Inhumaine - is boosted to vertiginous heights by his bold
and imaginative use of camera movement within the enormous, highly geometrical
sets. The most visually stunning scenes are those set in the Paris
Bourse - scenes that were actually filmed in the real location (within the
handsome Palais Brongniart) with around 2000 extras over the three-day Whitsun
holiday when the exchange was closed for business. The frenzy of human
activity within the Bourse offers a potent visual metaphor for the hysteria
of the masses succumbing to a wildly overheated speculative bubble and is
mirrored by similar shots of the crowds massing in the Place de l'Opéra,
a heaving mass of humanity anxiously awaiting news of a record-breaking flight.
The latter nocturnal scenes posed a major logistical challenge, requiring
a large number of spot lights to be erected on the rooftops of buildings
around the busy square.
L'Argent's interior studio sets are no less spectacular in their design
and scale, their enormity constantly emphasised by the use of wide-angle
lenses, long tracking shots and low- and high-angled camera positions.
Designers André Barsacq and Lazare Meerson achieved wonders with their
stylish, cavernous sets constructed at huge expense in the newly opened Francoeur
Studios in Paris. Most ambitious is the enormous space - the size of
a Hollywood dance stage - allocated for the centrepiece party sequence of
the film's second act. This includes an indoor pool and raised platforms
on which numerous dancers and musicians perform extravagant numbers (in the
manner of a Busby Berkeley musical), surrounded by a swollen mass of partygoers
heaving with vitality - the epitome of Roaring Twenties exuberance.
The bank sets are just as vast and vibrant, with endless ranks of secretaries
typing away amid the hustle and bustle that is the loudly beating heart of
the capitalist system. Tucked away in this labyrinthine complex like
an inner sanctum is the circular map room, which provides the film with its
eeriest shot - a camera tracking around the perimeter of the room, the lens
fixed on one of Gunderman's minions in such a way that he
appears to remain stationary as he moves whilst the whole world revolves
around him. The living areas of Gunderman and Baronnes Sandorf are
no less lavish in their size and furnishings, the stark and stylish
Art Deco adornments underling these characters' superior social status and
over-inflated self-importance.
It is with these elephantine interior spaces and the accompanying virtuoso
camerawork that L'Herbier manages to develop his trademark deep-space mise-en-scène
into a fine art, with a flamboyance and technical assuredness unmatched by
any other cineaste before or since. L'Herbier's achievement cannot
be overstated.
L'Argent isn't merely a film masterpiece - it
is the absolute pinnacle of impressionistic cinema. For just under three hours,
the spectator has no choice but to become totally immersed in
the dizzying casino reality of the film's protagonists as they become caught
up in a deranged speculative whirlwind set in motion by the money-obsessed
banker Saccard - a man with an almost god-like power and the lowest morals
imaginable.
The allure of the gambler
It wasn't long after Émile Zola created the character in his 1891
novel
L'Argent that 'Saccard' found its way into the French language,
becoming a byword for a corporate individual driven by an uncontrollable
lust for money. In L'Herbier's film, Saccard is the most laughably
egregious specimen of nouveau riche speculator you can conceive, a man to
be loathed and reviled, and yet there is something strangely heroic, almost
admirable about him. Pierre Alcover (a poor market porter who went
on to become a highly regarded stage actor) was a controversial choice for
the role but his casting proved to be totally inspired, possibly the greatest
single thing about
L'Argent. Alcover's immense physical bulk
and porcine features, combined with his plebeian mannerisms, make his character
both a fitting symbol for capitalist greed and a wildcard outsider capable
of sending the whole world into a turmoil through his risky actions.
Saccard may be the most loathsome individual in the story but he is also,
paradoxically, the only one who really engages our interest and sympathies.
No other character in
L'Argent has anything like the passion, drive
and energy that Saccard evinces in just about every scene. Whilst Saccard
blazes with a manic intensity throughout, the rest of the dramatis personae
(with the possible exception of a sensation-seeking journalist played by Jules
Berry) are just limp, anaemic passengers in a juggernaut driven at full-speed
down a perilous slalom by an over-energised madman drunk on his own ludicrous
self-confidence. The huge close-ups of Saccard's mean-looking piggy
face serve to exaggerate not only his sheer naked monstrosity but also his
deeply felt humanity. This is a man who is addicted to living on the
edge, a man who cannot exist without the thrill of jeopardy. We are
attracted to Saccard because we secretly envy him. There is a lurid
heroism to someone who makes a habit of living in a constant state of febrile
anticipation, not knowing whether the next moment will bring untold wealth
or abject ruin. Saccard's incredible power over others derives not
from his own capital (it hardly seems to matter whether he has money or not),
but rather his extreme pro-risk mindset, which makes him appear both excitingly
noble and deeply seductive. He not only has remarkable powers of persuasion,
able to gull thousands of investors with his wild speculative schemes, he
also has an intense erotic charm that make him irresistible to the opposite
sex - in spite of his unprepossessing appearance and boorish behaviour.
Nicolas Saccard is a force of nature and he knows it - the kind of unprincipled
snake oil merchant on which raw capitalism depends in its unending
war against social justice.
Alfred Abel's rival banker Gundermann would seem to represent the 'respectable'
side of the banking fraternity - the kind that spurns frivolous speculation and
values cold logic over gut feeling. Yet, far from being an admirable
figure, the restrained, starched-collared Gundermann comes across as even
more contemptible than the risk-obsessed Saccard. With his aristocratic
pomposity and underhand chicanery he presents an even uglier face of capitalism,
one that represents the interests of the haute bourgeoisie for whom Saccard
is immensely valuable, distracting the public gaze away from the far less
visible, but far more substantial wealth accumulation of the upper classes.
Gundermann's mistress - the icily seductive Baroness Sandorf (Brigitte Helm
at her most provocatively sensual) - straddles the two extremes represented
by the opposing bankers. With her cool detachment she plays the part
of the bourgeois aristocrat admirably but she is just as reckless a gambler
as Saccard. She even has a full-size gambling den in her own home -
with a semi-opaque ceiling in the room beneath so that she can see the shadows
of gamblers at play above her, stimulating her as she indulges in her earthier leisure
activities. As she moves around her Art Deco environs in her tight-fitting,
low-cut lamé gowns, shoulders hunched, her gaze alert, Sandorf resembles
a wild panther hungrily stalking its prey. It is her private feud with
Saccard that brings about his catastrophic downfall, and in the one
erotically charged scene where they come into closest physical contact it isn't entirely clear who
is seducing whom. Sandorf and Saccard are two of a kind - instruments
of chaos, their role being to keep spinning the cosmic roulette wheel that
keeps the flow of money circulating in and out of people's pockets.
Vampire or victim?
With Sandorf's simmering sensuality so tentatively always within his grasp,
it is hard to fathom why Saccard is strongly drawn to Line (Mary Glory),
the fairly prosaic wife of the even less interesting aviator he has gone
into business with. Yet the banker's hankering after such tepid low-grade
femininity is more than evident in his lustful features as his eyes fix on
her stockinged legs, his fleshy lips salivating at the prospect of yet another
speculative venture, on the chaise-longue. In the scene where Line
is gazing out of a window into the night sky Saccard creepily resembles Bela
Lugosi's
Dracula as he slowly sidles up to
her, his intent more than evident from the flagrantly libidinous look in
his eyes. This is a mild precursor to the subsequent rencontre in which,
finally giving into his bestial urges, Saccard attempts to rape his victim.
For this assault the perspective dramatically shifts from the banker to his
victim and the full extent of her terror is palpably rendered through a frenzied
montage of close-ups shot with a shaky hand-held camera.
As shocking as this is, as the scene develops, with the banker abruptly shamed
by his impetuous actions, it is him that we pity. By so readily accepting
the easy wealth that has been offered her - wealth that she has long
coveted - Line appears more blameworthy than her aggressor. How closely
she resembles the materialistic socialite Edith Hardy in Cecil B. DeMille's
The Cheat (1915), the film that first inspired L'Herbier to become
a filmmaker (and which he would remake as
Forfaiture
in 1937). Saccard, by contrast, strikes us as a man who is not responsible
for his actions. His impulsivity, recklessness and selfish impulses are
all beyond his control. He is no more worthy of censure than
La Bête humaine's Jacques
Lantier, a man prone to uncontrollable homicidal urges. By the end
of his film, L'Herbier compels us to regard Saccard not as a contemptible symbol of
the capitalist system, but rather a mere malfunctioning cog in a satanic
machine that exists to serve the interests of a privileged minority, whilst
bringing turmoil and misery into the lives of countless others.
No happy ending
L'Argent may conclude with a humorous twist but its underlying message
- that through money humanity has allowed itself to become the slave of capital
- is pretty grim. 'Money is a great servant but a bad master',
according to the 17th century philosopher Francis Bacon. Marcel L'Herbier
leaves us wondering whether even the first part of this statement is true.
As his film ends, the notional good guys Hamelin and Line appear forever
in hock to the all-powerful money men, the manipulative establishment banker
Gunderman has increased his wealth substantially and the financial wrecking
ball Saccard is poised to unleash his next get-rich-quick wheeze on the world
with results that are all too predictable. This is the cheering denouement
audiences were left with as they walked out of the theatres after watching
L'Argent in the spring of 1929, a time when the sky was blue, the
sun was shining and the prospects for stock market investors had never looked
rosier. Black Tuesday was still six months away.
© James Travers 2023
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Next Marcel L'Herbier film:
Le Mystère de la chambre jaune (1930)