Film Review
If director Paul Mesnier is remembered at all today it is most likely
to be for his early Louis de Funès comedy
Bébés à gogo
(1956) or his adaptation of Jules Renard's famous novella,
Poil de carotte (1952).
La Kermesse rouge, one of his
earlier films, is perhaps more deserving of attention, mostly on
account of its spectacular ending depicting the Bazar de la
Charité fire of 1897. This notorious conflagration was
started by the projectionist equipment of the Lumière brothers'
recently invented cinématographe, which was being exhibited at
the event. The fire claimed 126 lives, the most high profile
victim being the Duchess of Alençon, sister of the Empress
Elisabeth of Austria. The spectacular ending of Mesnier's film is
brilliantly staged and anticipates the disaster movie of later decades.
The film's other point of interest is its authentic recreation of Belle
Époque Paris, a halcyon time of peace and prosperity that would
be brutally torn asunder by the outset of the First World War. So
effective is the film in evoking the languorous harmony of the Belle
Époque that the dramatic climax genuinely does come as a
shock. It is as if the calm, ordered world so vividly rendered by
the impressionist painters has suddenly been overtaken by demonic
forces, plunging us into what looks like a scene from the
Apocalypse. It is one of the most horrific sequences of any
French film of this era, its impact heightened by the realisation that
a character that we have fallen in love with (a proto-feminist artist
played by Andrée Servilanges) is being burned alive out of
camera shot, and that nothing can save her (her fate having being
revealed right at the start of the film).
La Kermesse rouge is a lavish
production, scripted and directed with more care than flair, and its
main asset is an excellent cast, headed by Albert Préjean, the
actor who (arguably) profited most from Jean Gabin's absence during the
years of occupation. In his youth, Préjean was the
working class romantic lead of choice but he was always at his best
when cast as a socially and morally ambiguous character, such as the
one he plays here - a free-spirited Bohemian
who, once he has given in to bourgeois complacency and professional
jealousy, becomes an object of contempt and ridicule. In one of
her career highlights, Andrée Servilanges is perfectly suited to
play opposite Préjean, her character's transformation from
flighty society belle to committed artist emphasising the gradual moral
decline of her far less honourable lover as he undertakes the reverse
journey.
Germaine Kerjean and Jean Tissier equally give great value in roles to
which they are eminently suited, the one a prissy society matriarch,
the other a flamboyant artistic type you can easily imagine rubbing
shoulders with Matisse and Toulouse-Lautrec. Watch very closely
and you may catch a glimpse of the popular musician Gilbert
Bécaud, here making his screen debut as a pianist at the age of
19. It's hard to account for the present obscurity of
La Kermesse rouge - with its
full-bodied evocation of the Belle Époque and its utterly
horrific denouement it certainly makes an impact.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Paris in the 1890s. When Agnès Bonnardet falls in love
with a struggling Montmartre painter, Claude Sironi, her aristocratic
relatives waste no time in acting to thwart a mésalliance that
will bring disgrace on the family. Agnès has other ideas,
however. Having evaded the clutches of her interfering relatives,
she joins Claude's artistic circle and it isn't long before she herself
has embarked on the career of a painter. Some years after their
marriage, Claude and Agnès have begun to drift apart. His
inspiration failing, Claude has by now fallen out of favour with the
art world, whilst Agnès has no difficulty selling her
canvasses. As no one else will buy her husband's paintings, she
buys them herself, a deception that infuriates Claude when he discovers
the truth. Jealous of his wife's success, Claude substitutes one
of his own paintings for one that Agnès intended to auction at the
Bazar de la Charité. The event takes place on 4th May 1897
and will end in tragedy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.