Film Review
A full two years before François Truffaut published his
provocative essay condemning the 'tendency of French cinema' Julien
Duvivier arrived at a similar prognosis in his decidedly
tongue-in-cheek film
La Fête
à Henriette. Whereas Truffaut ends up hurling trite
pseudo-intellectual invective at the old guard that he and his New Wave
buddies would shortly go to war with, Duvivier relies on good,
old-fashioned satire to show us the malaise that was besetting the film
industry at the time. In the film's framing story, two
screenwriters - magnificently portrayed by Louis Seigner and Henri
Crémieux - have to come up with a new idea for a film.
Their latest attempt was stamped on by the censor and so they have to
go for something a little less controversial. Neither writer
wants to turn out the usual mindless crowdpleasing pap, but how far can
they allow their over-active imaginations run? Duvivier's
eccentric film is a witty observation on the pleasures and pitfalls of
the creative process - a struggle in which an author's desire to
express something new is constantly at war with the need to gain the
approval of the audience, the producer and the censor, that unholy
trinity of conservative mediocrity that has put the kibosh on many an
aspiring auteur.
By this stage in his career, Duvivier was sufficiently experienced to
know the limitations of his art. His own attempts at
experimentation - of which this is surely one - had rarely gone down
well and the film industry was predominantly geared towards giving
audiences what they wanted. The screenwriters who appear in
La Fête à Henriette
are readily identified as facets of Duvivier's own split personality -
the play-it-safe traditionalist and optimist (Siegner) at eternal
loggerheads with the mischievous cynic and borderline psychopath
(Crémieux). Amusing as the latter's narrative digressions
are (most involve someone being horribly murdered, in the manner of a
truly bad American B-movie thriller, with the camera constantly
inclined at 45 degrees), it is the former that always seems to get the
upper hand. What audiences want, and what the censor smiles on,
is good-natured sentimental drama, not sadistic blood-fests which leave
the authors struggling with the problem of what to do with all the dead
bodies. The fact that the film concludes with an entirely
predictable happy ending is a wry admission from a now distinctly
nonplussed Duvivier that French cinema has become irredeemably staid
and formulaic.
Whilst it remains a comparatively minor entry in Duvivier's impessive
body of work,
La Fête à
Henriette does have the distinction - perhaps somewhat
ironically - of having an expensive Hollywood remake. The 1962
film
Paris When It Sizzles, starring
William Holden and Audrey Hepburn, may have more enduring appeal, but
it lacks the acerbic tone and anarchic fun of the original.
Robert Guédiguian's 2000 film
À
l'attaque! is another near-remake of Duvivier's film which
is more authentic in its representation of the trauma of the creative
process. Whilst both of these films are entertaining and
insightful neither is as effective as Duvivier's in showing the factors
that limit an artist's vision - in particular, the cold commercial
pragmatism that forces a screenwriter or filmmaker to give audiences
only what they are used to.
In later years Duvivier's schizophrenic attitude towards filmmaking
would be reflected in his films, which alternated traditional quality
crowdpleasers -
Pot-Bouille (1957) and
Le Diable et les dix commandements
(1962) - with more daring and pessimistic works -
Voici le temps des assassins
(1956) and
La Chambre ardente
(1962). It is as if Duvivier was trying, perhaps a little too
self-consciously, to refute Truffaut's flat denial that there could
ever be a "peaceful co-existence of the Tradition of Quality and an
auteur's cinema." To a degree,
La
Fête à Henriette is as incisive a commentary on the
state of French cinema in the 1950s as Truffaut's famous essay, with
the added advantage that it is much funnier and considerably less
po-faced. In May 1956, at the Cannes Film Festival, Duvivier and
Truffaut discussed the possibility of making a film together. If
Duvivier hadn't been tied up on another project (
L'Homme à l'imperméable)
it might even have come off, with the result that the French New Wave
may never have happened. Now there's a thought - Julien Duvivier
singlehandedly derails the Nouvelle Vague...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Julien Duvivier film:
Le Petit monde de Don Camillo (1952)
Film Synopsis
When the censor rejects their latest script two screenwriters set about
developing the scenario for a new film. They soon decide on their
main characters - a young Parisian dressmaker named Henriette and her
fiancé, a photo-journalist named Robert. The difficulty is
coming up with an original story to place them in. As Henriette's
birthday is the 14th July, what better than to set the entire film
during France's national holiday? Henriette and Robert will
arrange to meet up amid the festivities but, for some reason, fate
keeps them apart. Of course! Robert has another love
interest, the irresistible starlet Rita Solar. Whilst Robert is
called away, ostensibly on business, Heniette is left alone - but not
for long. This is when the third character in the film will show
up, a suave gangster type, Maurice. With nothing better to do,
Heniette hooks up with Maurice, and before she knows it she is caught
up in his latest criminal exploit. But how will it end - with a
stage strewn with gore-splattered bodies, or with the lovelorn couple
happily reunited under a night sky ablaze with fireworks? The
audience will no doubt expect the predictable happy ending, but do they
deserve to get what they expect...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.