Film Review
An early example of the portmanteau or episodic film that was to become
hugely popular with French audiences in the following decade,
La Femme que j'ai le plus aimée
boasts a distinguished cast but suffers from a lack of imagination on
both the writing and directing fronts. Scripted by Yves Mirande,
who had previously shown promise as a director with
Café de Paris (1938) and
Derrière la façade
(1939), the film was directed by Robert Vernay, with little of the
flair he would bring to the following year's historical epic
Le Comte de Monte Cristo
(1943). Like all portmanteau films, this one consists of several
similar stories linked by an overarching theme, in this case that of a
love affair that ends in rejection and heartbreak. For an
Occupation era audience the film must have made grim viewing and today
it is plodding and dreary, its only redeeming featuring being the
abundance of acting talent that somehow holds it together. Even
though most of the performers were past their best, and some were well
on their way towards obscurity, the presence of such likeable actors as
René Lefèvre, Arletty, Noël-Noël and Jean
Tissier brings a welcome lustre to an otherwise charmless and pretty
forgettable film.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2014
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Next Robert Vernay film:
Le Comte de Monte Cristo (1943)
Film Synopsis
Claude is unhappy at having just broken up with the woman of his
life. Over dinner one evening his five friends try to lift his
spirits by relating their own amorous misfortunes. The surgeon
was seduced by a cabaret artiste who was his lodger but didn't pay her
rent. The theatre manager thought that his paramour was the
author of the plays she asked him to put on stage; in fact, the plays
were written by her husband, whom she wanted to succeed. The
industrialist was in love with a humble secretary, but she let him
down. The lawyer was deeply in love with a female sculptor, who
left him for her work. The painter pretended to be dead after he
saw his wife having an affair with his best friend. But maybe
there is still hope for Claude and the woman he loves the most...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.