Film Review
Yvan Govar is an unjustly forgotten Belgian filmmaker who specialised
in crime dramas that were not always well-crafted - films like
Un soir par hazard,
Que
personne ne sorte,
Ce
soir on tue and
Deux heures
à tuer. On 25 July 1962, Govar released a
Franco-Belgian film entitled
La
Croix des vivants, a psychological drama which is one of his
least typical and best works. A powerful and ambiguous film, it
has a somewhat bombastic style in parts but it retains its lyricism
throughout. It is the story of a modern Oedipus whose return to
his village triggers an amazing drama of love and hatred, reminiscent
of the return of the prodigal son.
The characters appear to be roving in a kind of Tennesse Williams
mindscape, caught up in a suffocating universe that is so redolent of
Williams' plays. The film is extremely well cast and offers some
magnificent contributions from such distinguished actors as: the
lovely Pascale Petit, who plays the innocent but sultry Maria; the
German actor Karl-Heinz Boehm (Romy Schneider's handsome co-star in the
Sissi films), superb as Gus;
the Belgian-born poet-actor and Pascale Petit's husband Giani Esposito,
fabulous as the mystic and passionate Yan; the incredible icon
Madeleine Robinson, perfect as Madame van Dormeck; and the Italian
actor Gabrielle Ferzetti, magnificent as the priest Delcourt. In
the supporting parts, we recognize: Alain Cuny a pillar of French
cinema from the 1930s to the 1980s; the emblematic actress Marie
Dubois; and Roger Dumas.
With the financial support of Warner Brothers, Yvan Govar manages to
deliver a lavish production, which is well-scripted by Maurice Clavel
and Alain Cavalier. Alas, the film was a commercial failure and
this would blight Yvan Govar's subsequent career. Some will
consider this little gem to be totally outdated, but it is by all
accounts an excellent film that definitely deserves to be rediscovered.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
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Film Synopsis
Some time after he was falsely accused of the murder of his stepfather,
Yan returns to his home village in Flanders. Franz, the local
garage owner is not happy with his return. Before he died, Yan's
stepfather was going to give him financial support in the construction
of a new racing car and Frantz remains convinced that Yan killed
him. Despite the cool reception he receives, Yan is at least
welcomed by two of the villagers, the vicar and his best friend, Gus
Van Dorneck, the owner of a thriving timber business. With the
support of Gus and his wealthy mother, Yan finds employment and a
chance to start a new life. Gus has a fiancée, Maria, an
Italian beauty who lives at the Van Dorneck house. Maria is all
set to marry Gus when she sees Yan and realises that he is the man for
her. One night, whilst alone in Gus' house, Yan yields to Maria's
entices, not knowing that in doing so he is betraying his one true
friend...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.