Film Review
With its claustrophobic account of a close-knit community being torn apart by
fear, suspicion and malicious denunciations,
L'Assassinat
du Père Noël has much in common with Henri-Georges
Clouzot's
Le Corbeau (1943).
The plots may differ but the two films powerfully evoke the mood of the time in which they were made,
conveying the sense of mistrust and paranoia that was widely felt in France
during the Occupation. The similarities between the two
films are more evident when we realise that they
were both made for the German-run company Continental Films.
Many of the screenwriters and directors who worked for Continental were
far from sympathetic to the Occupation and would salve their
consciences by introducing an allegorical subtext into their films -
one which their German supervisors would miss but which would be easily
picked up by the average French cinemagoer.
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
is one of the most blatant examples of this - its depiction of an
idyllic mountain community becoming unsettled by a series of sinister
events would have had an immediate resonance with most French people in
the early 1940s as they adjusted to life under Nazi rule. The killing of Father Christmas
would appear to symbolise the loss of cherished ideals,
but, as is later implied in the film, such ideals prove much harder to expunge
than it might be supposed. A contemporary audience would most
probably have viewed the film as a statement of defiance. Father
Christmas is after all not a man but an idea, and ideas cannot be
killed.
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
is an historically significant film, since it was the first to be made
in France after the country's capitulation to the Germans in
1940. It was the first film that was made by Continental and it set a
very high standard for all subsequent films produced by the German-run
company. Although the Occupation is often characterised as one of
the darkest periods in the history of France, a time when the nation
was humiliated and most ordinary people experienced real hardship, it
was also undeniably a period in which French cinema flourished, thanks
in no small measure to the resources that the Germans threw at it in a
bid to distract a conquered nation (the old
panem et circenses routine).
Through a combination of coercion and bribery, the bosses at
Continental managed to tap the creative juices of the most talented
artists in French cinema (excluding those who had already fast-footed it to
Hollywood), and so it is perhaps not surprising that an unusually high
proportion of the company's films are now held in high esteem.
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
is a particularly good example of Continental's output, excelling in
virtually every department (except possibly its plot, which resolves
the mystery far too casually and hurriedly). For one thing,
the film has an impressive cast which includes some titans of 1940s
French cinema: Harry Baur, Raymond Rouleau, Robert Le Vigan and Fernand
Ledoux, not forgetting the stunning Renée Faure in her first
screen role. Baur, a giant of both stage and screen, dominates
the film with one of his customary bravura turns, dripping
pathos and understated menace by the bucket-load. Tragically, this
would be his penultimate film appearance. Shortly after
completing his final film in Germany,
Sinfonie
eines Lebens (1942), Baur was arrested by the Gestapo and
subjected to torture which, it is believed, led to his premature death
in 1943. In a similarly ironic vein, Robert Le Vigan, who plays
the character who tries to denounce an innocent man to the authorities,
was himself branded a collaborator after the war and was driven into
exile in South America.
Before he directed this film, Christian-Jaque was known primarily for
his low-grade comedies, most of which featured the popular comic actor
Fernandel. He had yet to acquire the reputation of a serious
filmmaker that he later earned through his lavish period productions,
but he had made one notable film,
Les Disparus de Saint-Agil
(1938), an atmospheric comedy-thriller which is now considered a
classic of French cinema.
L'Assassinat
du Père Noël is similar to this film, offering a
comparable mix of mystery, suspense and dark humour, but is much darker
in tone, thanks largely to Charles Spaak's bitterly tongue-in-cheek
screenplay and Armand Thirard's exceptionally moody cinematography.
The camerawork and lighting on this film are particularly striking,
bringing a fluidity and brooding intensity that is quiet unusual for
this era of French cinema. The one sequence that stands out as
being particularly inspired is the one in which the camera pans around
the apparently jilted Catherine, revealing her sense of desolation by
showing us the flurry of revelry that surrounds her, the scene building
to a climax of euphoria which suddenly collapses when two children
appear from nowhere and timorously announce the death of Father
Christmas. The scene could have been shot by Hitchcock.
Armand Thirard would employ similarly inspired use of the subjective
camera on his films for Clouzot, notably
Le Salaire de la peur (1953)
and
Les Diabolioques (1955).
As on his earlier
Les Disparus de
Saint-Agil, Christian-Jaque manages to coax some incredibly
convincing performances from his child actors, thereby investing the
film with a playful innocence which beautiful complements its darker
elements. Whilst they are somewhat peripheral to the central
plot, the scenes with the lame boy Christian (the uncredited Bernard
Daydé) deliver a real emotional punch and remind us what
Christmas is really meant to be about - a time when children should be
allowed to believe in fairytales and see the world as a place where
hopes can be fulfilled. By juxtaposing the innocent realm of
childhood fantasy with an adult world that is mired in fear and
corruption, Christian-Jaque transforms a whimsical murder mystery into
a cogent morality tale, one that shows us the virtue of holding onto
our beliefs, however fanciful they may be. A world without Santa
is a dark place indeed.
© James Travers 2002
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Film Synopsis
Deep in the Savoie, a small alpine village decked in snow is busy making
preparations for Christmas. Busiest of all is the old toy-maker Cornusse,
who occupies himself by making globes, a popular gift, whilst his attractive
daughter Catherine is happily engaged in sewing dolls' dresses. Little
does Cornusse know that his darling daughter is in love - with the mysterious
baron Roland de la Faille, a reclusive young man who lives alone in his grand
old house. The villagers have grown suspicious of the baron since his
arrival and fear that, because he never removes the glove from his right hand,
he must have contracted leprosy on one of his travels. Catherine is
the only person who shows Roland any sympathy, and without her father knowing,
she pays him the occasional visit, growing fonder of him all the while.
On Christmas Eve, the baron is prevented from keeping a dinner engagement
with Catherine. Coincidentally, at the same time a valuable jewel is
stolen from a crib in the village church. A short while later, a stranger
is found lying dead in the snow, dressed in a Santa Claus costume - identical
to the one that Cornusse has a habit of wearing during the Yuletide season.
With the village cut off because of the heavy snowfall, the police are delayed
in arriving to investigate the crime, so the villagers set about solving the
mystery themselves. Cornusse is one possible suspect, although it's
hard to believe that such a well-liked and generous soul is capable of murder.
A more likely suspect is the baron, about whom so little is known and who
seems determined to keep his past a secret...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.