Film Review
In
La Fille du puisatier,
writer-director Marcel Pagnol revisits many of the themes he explored
in his previous films - the father-daughter relationship, the shame of
an unwanted pregnancy, family rupture and reconciliation - and delivers
a melodrama of exceptional charm and poignancy. Pagnol's
restrained mise-en-scène and extensive use of natural locations
(unusual for this period) evoke the bucolic simplicity and slow pace of
Provençal life in the 1930s, more vividly than any other films
of this era. Once again, Pagnol is well-served by a superlative
cast that is headed by two iconic performers who had appeared in
several of his earlier films: Raimu, arguably the finest French screen
actor of his day, and Fernandel, who was emerging as one of France's
most popular comic actors. This was to be Raimu's final
collaboration with Pagnol before his untimely death in 1946; Fernandel
would make one more film with the director,
Topaze (1951), before finding
international fame with his interpretation of Don Camillo.
La Fille du puisatier may not
be Marcel Pagnol's greatest film - indeed a less generous
reviewer would write it off as a bland rehash of the director's
previous
Angèle (1934) - but it
does assume some historical significance by dint of the fact that it
documents France's capitulation to Nazi Germany more or less as it was
happening. Work on the film began in May 1940 but was suspended
in June at the height of the debacle. Filming resumed in August
after France's surrender and the establishment of the Vichy
government. The only member of the original cast who was
unavailable for the remount was Betty Daussmond, who was replaced by
Line Noro (in the role of Madame Mazel). In the interim,
Fernandel had been away on military service (an escapade which merits a
film in its own right). Pagnol made a few tweaks to his script,
the most significant being a scene in which the main characters listen
to a radio broadcast by Maréchal Pétain, the recently
installed head of the Vichy government. This scene, which
perfectly captures the sentiment of the defeated French nation, was
excised from prints when the film was released immediately after the
war but was subsequent reinstated.
Whilst it is a little overlong and somewhat marred by an unnecessary
happy ending,
La Fille du puisatier
is an engaging piece that exemplifies both Pagnol's skill as a writer
and his acute understanding of human nature. The characters are
all well-drawn and authentically played by a remarkable ensemble of
actors. In a performance that virtually matches the one he gave
in Pagnol's
La Femme du boulanger (1938),
Raimu brings genuine emotion and an arresting intensity to his
portrayal of a man who is torn between his pride and his love for the
daughter who shames him. As the kind-hearted stooge, Fernandel
fits so well into the landscape of Pagnol's films that is hard to
imagine him in any other setting - this is the kind of role he played
best and the one in which he gives greatest value. Although Raimu
takes the emotional focus for pretty well most of the film, he does
occasionally release us from his spell, allowing his co-stars Charpin
and Josette Day to come to the fore with a few moments of delicately
played poignancy.
Seventy years on, a
remake of this film is now in production, directed
by Daniel Auteuil, who had previously starred in Claude Berri's remake
of another Marcel Pagnol film,
Manon des sources. This
will be Auteuil's first work as a director and he will star in the film
alongside Kad Merad and Mélanie Laurent. The film is
scheduled to be released in April 2011. Whether it succeeds in
evoking the timeless magic of Pagnol's Provence remains to be seen.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Marcel Pagnol film:
La Belle meunière (1948)
Film Synopsis
France, 1939. Pascal Amoretti and his assistant Felipe earn an
honest living by digging wells in their picturesque region of
Provence. Felipe is love with Patricia, the eldest of his
employer's six daughters, but she is unaware of his feelings towards
her. In fact, Patricia has already lost her heart to an officer
pilot in the French army, Jacques Mazel, the son of a wealthy
shopkeeper. One day, Amoretti allows Felipe to take his daughter
to an air show in his new motorcar. At the show, Patricia runs
into Jacques and allows him to take her off to his bachelor's pad,
leaving a distraught Felipe to get drunk. Patricia refuses to be
seduced by her beau but allows him to take her home on his motorcycle,
since Felipe is in no fit state to drive. During this journey,
Patricia can no longer resist her lover's powers of seduction.
The two agree to meet the next day but as soon as he gets back home
Jacques learns that he must immediately return to his squadron.
His mother refuses to give Patricia the letter apologising for his
absence and so the well-digger's daughter naturally assumes she has
been rejected. Some months later, Patricia finds she is pregnant
with Jacques' child. When Amoretti breaks this news to the
Mazels, they refuse to believe his story. Dishonoured,
the well-digger sends his daughter away to stay with an aunt for the
duration of the pregnancy. In the meantime, Felipe has been
called up for military service, but during his leave he manages to
patch things up between Amoretti and his daughter. News is then
received that Jacques has gone missing during a flying mission and is
feared dead...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.