Film Review
If Léo Joannon is remembered today it is most likely on account
of his unfortunate association with Laurel and Hardy in their final
film
Atoll
K (1951). Joannon directed several other comedies,
almost all of them better than this dismal L&H swansong, but it was
with his dramas that he was most successful, although the vast bulk of
his work is (somewhat unjustly) overlooked today. One film of his
that is inexplicably forgotten is
L'Émigrante
(1940), an absorbing film noir melodrama that strongly evokes the gloom
and pessimism of the era in which it was made (it was released in March
1940, just a few months before France capitulated to Nazi
Germany). The film is impressively mounted and is distinguished
by strong performance from two immensely talented stars of the French
stage, Edwige Feuillère and Jean Chevrier.
L'Émigrante suffers
from a somewhat contrived plot (conceived by Yves Allégret and
Jean Aurenche) but a strong central performance from Feuillère
somehow makes it plausible. It helps that there are some
unexpected twists and turns before we get to the all-too-predictable
noir denouement (which is the weakest element of the film).
L'Émigrante owes its
relentlessly oppressive mood to the work of cinematographers Henri
Alekan and Eugen Schüfftan, whose combined artistry makes this one
of Joannon's most compelling and atmospheric films. For a film
that could easily hold its own alongside other memorable American films
noirs of this era, it is hard to account for its present obscurity.
Renowned for playing the damned or flagrantly immoral female (Lucrezia
Borgia in Abel Gance's
Lucrèce Borgia, a
lesbian headmistress in
Olivia and a mature cradle
snatcher in
Le Blé en herbe), Edwige
Feuillère is well chosen for the part of the seemingly
irredeemable heroine Christiane, a conflicted character that gives the
actress plenty of scope to demonstrate her tremendous range. Jean
Chevrier is equally well-served by his far from archetypal character,
one whose stubborn nobility serves as a benchmark by which we may measure
Christiane's moral progression as she realises there is more to life
than riches. Georges Lannes's character, by contrast, proves to
be a flagrant noir cliché, the inveterate gangster-type of the
kind who usually ends up shooting Humphrey Bogart in the back.
Lannes's Tino may be a well-worn stereotype but he has a powerful
physical presence which lingers even when he is off the screen, lending
credulity to Christiane's obvious fear of being cornered by him.
The film's other stand-out performance is supplied by Pierre Larquey, a
much-loved character actor who seems to be in
every French film of this period
(one suspects he was the result of a secret government cloning
experiment). Larquey's natural aura of trusting innocence can
only make us hate the calculating Feuillère as he falls foul of
her selfish machinations, and this is probably why the film's dramatic
ending isn't quite as convincing as it should be. Short of
drowning a dozen newborn meerkats and their mother in a bucket of acid,
there's not much more that Feuillère could have done to alienate
her audience after deceiving Pierre Larquey and then subjecting him to
the far from tender mercies of the Portuguese health service.
But, like any capable politician, tax inspector or maths teacher,
Feuillère doesn't need to be liked to prove she's the best there
is. Even when we loathe her and can hardly wait to see her get
her comeuppance she is still magnificent.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Léo Joannon film:
Caprices (1942)
Film Synopsis
Christiane is the owner of a popular night club whose habitués
includes Monrozat, a sad wreck of a man who is desperately looking for
a woman to accompany him to South America to start a new life.
When Christiane is robbed of her precious diamond necklace by her
partner Tino, a notorious trafficker, she denounces him to the police
as he attempts to leave the country. The news of Tino's escape
from custody sends Christiane into a wild panic. Certain that the
hoodlum intends to kill her, she agrees to accompany Monrozat as his
wife to South America. Their journey is barely underway before
Monrozat falls ill and has to be taken to hospital when their ship
docks at Lisbon. Christiane stays on board, and evades capture by
the intervention of a young ship's officer, François
Champart. François is dismissed for disobeying orders and
must join the other steerage passengers, who persuade him to settle
with them in South America. When Christiane insists on being
given a first class berth, François realises he has been duped
by her and will have nothing more to do with her. When the
ship reaches its destination, Christiane finds she has one last chance
to redeem herself before her final confrontation with Tino...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.