Film Review
La Bête humaine marks a
significant turning point in the cinema of Jean Renoir, both
stylistically and thematically, although its greater significance is
the affect that it would have on American film noir of the following
decade in the wake of its successful international release.
An inspired adaptation of Emile Zola's celebrated 1890 novel (the
17th installment in the author's mammoth Les Rougon-Macquart saga),
the film makes a startling contrast with Renoir's previous
La
Marseillaise (1938), which reflected both the director's
solidarity with the working class and his faith in the Popular Front
government. But even before that film had been released, the
left-wing coalition had fallen apart and the Popular Front was
discredited. It was inevitable that Renoir's next film would
be an intensely gloomy affair which evokes, albeit tangentially, the
widely felt disillusionment with socialism in a country whose nearest
neighbours were nonchalantly embracing fascist totalitarianism.
Despite its bleaker tone,
La
Bête humaine can be considered to form a loose trilogy of
films with Renoir's two other great films of the decade,
La Grande illusion (1937) and
La
Règle du jeu (1939). What connects these three
films is Renoir's preoccupation with and contempt for the class
barriers which divided French society in the 1930s. In his youth,
Renoir was something of a political activist and made no secret as to
where his sympathies lay. He had expressed his left-wing, even
Communist, leanings in films such as
La
Vie est à nous (1936) and
Le Crime de Monsieur Lange
(1936). Whilst championing the proletariat, Renoir would portray
the middle and upper classes as villains and parasites, with capitalism
cast as the enemy of social progress. But in contrast to
La Grande illusion, which
anticipates a classless society, and
La
Règle du jeu, a scathing assault on the ruling classes,
La Bête humaine feels almost
like an admission of defeat. The social archetypes in this film
seem condemned to remain in their allotted grooves forever, so that the
good working class man and woman with whom Renoir had such a powerful
affinity would be doomed forever to pay for the follies commited by
those higher up the social scale.
It is interesting that whilst the film quotes Zola's deterministic
rationalisation for Lantier's murderous fits (twice in fact),
attributing these to a blood illness derived from generations of
debauched living, Renoir pretty well discounts this and instead makes
the social context a more plausible driver for the story's grim
developments. The tragic spiral that draws in Lantier,
Séverine and Roubaud arises from the collision of basic human
impulses (subconscious in the case of Lantier) with the social
constraints of the time. It is, after all, class consciousness
that impels Roubaud to send Séverine to Grandmorin in a cowardly
bid to save his job after he upset a rich customer, setting in
motion the locomotive of intense passions that would end in disaster
for all. Séverine exploits not only her obvious
feminine charms but also the authority that comes naturally from her
higher social position to coax Lantier into doing her bidding and rid
her of the husband she has grown to fear and despise.
Lantier's lack of moral conviction is affirmed when, having throttled
Séverine, he decides he can no longer go on living. His
suicide leap from an unstoppable train provides a crude metaphor for the
failure of socialism in the 1930s.
Zola's novel ended with the train, driverless and laden with drunken flag-waving soldiers, hurtling
towards oblivion. If Renoir had retained this ending, his film
would have been even more prescient of the disaster that lay just
around the corner for humankind.
Unusually,
La Bête humaine
was not a project which Renoir himself initiated. It began with
Jean Gabin's desire to fulfil his life-long ambition to be a train
driver. Gabin had written a screenplay entitled
Train d'enfer, which he had asked
Jean Grémillion - with whom he had just worked on
Gueule
d'amour (1937) - to direct. Grémillion was
unimpressed by the script and instead suggested an adaptation of Emile
Zola's novel
La Bête humaine,
one of the latter instalments in the writer's monumental
Rougon-Macquart saga. By this
time, Gabin had collaborated with Jean Renoir on
La Grande illusion and was keen to
work with him again, so he asked producers Robert and Raymond Hakim to
commission Renoir to direct
La
Bête humaine. The commercial failure of Renoir's
previous film,
La Marseillaise,
may have been a factor in the director's decision to accept the
job. His earlier Zola adaptation -
Nana
(1926) - had been one of his most spectacular box office
flops.
La Bête humaine is
arguably the most conventional of the films that Jean Renoir made in
the 1930s - a familiar crime melodrama offering the obligatory love
triangle and some pretty gruesome killings (which conveniently take
place out of camera-shot). It is the closest that Renoir ever got
to making what we would now term a B-movie, and its similarity to
subsequent American film noir crime dramas is indicative of the
influence that it had on the genre. Yet there is clearly far more
to this film than just the usual seedy cocktail of illicit romance
and murderous intrigue that makes up your everyday classic film
noir. The main protagonists are easily aligned with the familiar
noir archetypes, but Renoir gives them a reality, a depth and humanity,
that compels us to sympathise with them. Lantier, Roubaud and
Séverine (skilfully played by Jean Gabin, Fernand Ledoux and
Simone Simon) each performs the mortal sin of murdering another human
being, but they do so not because they are inherently evil, but because
they are all susceptible to a stimulus that cannot be resisted.
Roubaud is driven to kill through jealousy, Séverine through
fear and a desire to be free. Lantier's case is the most poignant
- he kills without being consciously aware of his actions, taken over
by a mental illness in which his primitive self asserts itself and
transforms him into a homicidal savage. In the classic film noir
treatment, Séverine would be the femme fatale, the heartless seductress
who drags the hero Lantier unwittingly to his doom, whilst
Roubaud would be a stock villain who deserves what he gets.
Renoir avoids such simplistic judgmentalism and instead portrays each
of his characters as tragic victims of the beast instincts that lie
dormant in each of us.
La Bête humaine also
departs from the conventional film noir in its jarring mix of
styles. Prior to this, Renoir had experimented, with varying
degrees of success, with a style that we would now term
neo-realist. In
Toni
(1934),
Partie de Campagne (1936) and
Les
Bas-fonds (1936), the director had made a conscious effort
to break away from the polished but somewhat stilted feel of
studio-based dramas and capture something of the spontaneity and sunny
naturalism of impressionist art, of which his own father,
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, had been a leading exponent. In
La Bête humaine, Renoir
appears to be torn between naturalism and the poetic realist style that
had recently come into vogue, in such films as Julien Duvivier's
Pépé
le Moko (1937) and Marcel Carné's
Le
Quai des brumes (1938). The documentary-style
exterior shots (including the dramatic opening sequence of a train
surging relentless down a set of railway tracks, symbolising the drama that ensues) sit ill alongside the
studio interiors, which are lit in an almost expressionistic
vein. The disjointedness of the film's visual style is emphasised
by a painfully intrusive score that obliterates much of the subtlety of
Renoir's mise-en-scène and risks reducing some of the film's
more dramatic scenes to obscene caricature.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing about
La Bête humaine is that,
whilst it is marred by some obvious stylistic imperfections, its
director (assisted by three extremely talented lead actors) manages to
somehow pull together a story of extraordinary power and cohesion - one
that transcends the very genre it would inspire with its stark
simplicity and excruciating humanity. Fritz Lang attempted
a creditable remake with
Human Desire (1954), but
Renoir's version is much more interesting, not only because the
characters are far more sympathetically and convincingly drawn, but
also because of what it reveals about its director at a pivotal moment
in his career. This is the point at which Renoir became more
interested in individuals rather than their social setting and thereby found a
more effective way to express his deepest human feelings. It is
no coincidence that his next film would be his greatest achievement,
and an unrivalled masterpiece of French cinema.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Jean Renoir film:
La Marseillaise (1938)
Film Synopsis
Roubaud, a stationmaster based in Le Havre, is anxious to get on in his career,
and he hopes that in this he might be assisted by Grandmorin, a prominent
businessman who exerts some influence over the railways. Because Grandmorin
is the godfather of Roubard's wife Séverine, he is hopeful that the
industrialist will do him a good turn. What he had not bargained on
is that Séverine and her seemingly impeccable godfather have been
lovers for some time. When Roubard finds this out he is overcome with
fury and murders the businessman during a train journey from Paris to Le
Havre, in front of his wife.
Afterwards, Roubard becomes concerned that his crime may have been witnessed
by Jacques Lantier, a railway mechanic who was in the train at the time.
His fears are justified, but Lantier has no intention of betraying Roubard
to the authorities. It is to protect Séverine, the woman he
has suddenly fallen in love with, that leads Lantier to keep his silence.
Séverine shows her gratitude by becoming the mechanic's lover, but
in doing so she knows she is likely to further inflame her husband's jealousy.
Fearing that Roubard may kill them both, Séverine encourages Lantier
to rid her of the man she has come to loathe. Little does she know
that the seemingly meek railway worker has a hereditary condition that causes
him to become a dangerous killer when a woman arouses deep emotions in him.
Unwittingly, Séverine is about to unleash a primordial urge to destroy
that will bring about not only her own death but also that of her beloved
Lantier...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.