Film Review
L'Or des mers is the third in a series of films that Jean Epstein
made in his adopted Brittany towards the latter part of his career.
In common with its two predecessors -
Finis Terrae (1929) and
Mor vran (1931) - the film was
shot entirely on location in Brittany (in the most arduous of conditions),
adopting a similar documentary style that Robert Flaherty had pioneered with
Nanook of the North
(1922). Part fable, part ethnological document,
L'Or des mers
allowed Epstein to craft another harrowingly authentic portrait of Breton
life, stark with its hardships and insecurities, whilst expressing his own
anti-materialist sentiment through what is assuredly his most virulent assault
on human greed and hypocrisy.
Of Epstein's Breton poems, this is by far the grimmest, as bleak in its subject
matter as in its location. Unusually, its author shows far more interest
in his human protagonists than in the raw natural landscape, which serves
as little more than a suitably dour backdrop. The island setting is
far more forbidding than in Epstein's previous films, and has noticeably
less of an anthropomorphic character. Photographed through various
gauzes and filters, it is steeped in subtle menace, and there is a feeling
of claustrophobia that tightens as the story builds to its tense climax.
There is also a greater preponderance of interior scenes (which constantly
emphasise the appalling poverty in which the islanders live) and a return
to the massive close-up of Epstein's early experimental years. It is
through the director's deft use of the close-up that we gain admission to
his protagonists' closeted private world and fully appreciate the extent
of their remoteness - as much from each other as from the world community.
In none of Epstein's other Breton films do his characters more resemble a
damned remnant of humanity, clinging to life on the most inhospitable scrap
of land as they fall prey to the most deplorable of human vices.
Continuing the experiment of his previous Breton films, Epstein assembled
his entire cast from locals on the island, having first gained the support
and confidence of an important member of the community - on this occasion
the island's rector Abbé Jégo. The principal roles of
the old man and his daughter were given to two characterful individuals,
Martin le Scoarnec and Adelina Le Gurun, with Rémy Blanchet (the grandfather
of a subsequent mayor of the island) taking the part of the handsome hero.
Jego also appears in the film as himself, and cuts a bizarre figure as he
crosses the misty, barren landscape in his rector's garb with a raised rifle
and a dog at his heels, looking like something out of a Luis Buñuel
film. The stiff performances are redeemed by some memorably stirring
close-ups, particularly those of Le Gurun. The latter's uncomprehending
grief after the sudden death of her father and subsequent expression of abandonment
as she is pulled beneath the treacherous sinking sands provide the film with
its moments of raw visceral engagement. A striking impressionistic
sequence, showing the imagined wedding of the seemingly doomed heroine superimposed
on a glistening calm sea, is another inspired touch.
L'Or des mers is a film that has considerable artistic merit, but
it has one glaring deficiency - the most ineptly applied soundtrack.
Even though Jean Epstein went about making the film as if it were a silent
piece, it was inevitable that it would be released as a sound film, since,
by this time (late 1931) there was little commercial value in silent cinema.
The film was in fact commissioned by Synchro-Ciné which, since its
foundation by Charles Delacommune in 1920, had striven to develop a sound
system that would revolutionise cinema. Synchro-Ciné had already
hired Epstein to direct a (now lost) documentary
Notre-Dame de Paris
and some of its
chansons filmées, short films (between three
and five minutes in duration) that combined songs and images (a precursor
to today's pop video) - these include
Le Cor,
Le Vieux chaland
and
Les Berceaux.
It is fair to say that in the process of adding sound to the film, Synchro-Ciné
effectively destroyed
L'Or des mers. It's bad enough that absolutely
no attempt was made to try to synchronise the spoken dialogue with the actors'
lip movements, with results that are unintentionally comical. In addition,
the company had to tack on some completely superfluous narration (which has
the absurd portentousness of an over-earnest public information film) and
an incredibly over-the-top musical score that could not be more out of sympathy
with the images if it tried. Although the film was praised in some
quarters on its release in 1933, its soundtrack was almost universally reviled
and was probably the main reason why it failed so spectacularly to attract
an audience. Epstein conceived
L'Or des mers as a silent film,
he made it as if it were a silent film, so the only way to fully appreciate
the power of the piece is to watch it as a silent film, with the sound implacably
turned
off. Never has the adage 'silence is golden' felt more
apt.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Epstein film:
Les Berceaux (1932)
Film Synopsis
Hoëdic is one of the poorer islands in the Breton archipelago off the
coast of northwestern France. It is a desolate expanse of rock inhabited
by a hundred fishing families who, unable to work for half of the year, live
in extreme poverty, dependent on alms supplied by their kindly rector.
The poorest of the island's poor is Quoirrec, an old man who lives apart
with his daughter Soizig. One day, Quoirrec comes across a little box
that has been washed up on the seashore. Greedily, he takes the box
and stows it away behind some rocks on the most inaccessible part of the
beach. He does not know that he has been spied on and within no time
it is all over the island that the old man has found a large quantity of
gold.
Immediately, the islanders begin to treat Quoirrec very differently from
before. They greet him, flatter him, offer him tobacco and even ply
him with drink. Quoirrec drinks so much that he wanders off in a daze
and promptly suffers a fatal seizure. The old man has barely been laid
to rest before the islanders switch their attention to his daughter, who
was let into his secret just before he died. The only person to see
Soizig's real worth is a young fisherman, Rémy, who considers taking
her as his wife. His father forbids the marriage unless the young woman
hands over to him the stash of gold she inherited from her father.
Soizig has no choice but to go and fetch the gold, but in doing so she is
caught in a quagmire and is slowly sucked beneath the wet sand. Rémy
risks his life to save her, knowing that she is more precious than her father's
treasure - treasure which turns out to be nothing more than a few worthless
tin cans...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.