Film Review
La Ligne de démarcation
is an atypical film for Claude Chabrol, the only war film he directed,
although he did subsequently make a documentary on Pétainist
propaganda,
L'Oeil de Vichy
(1993), and two other films -
Le Sang
des autres (1984) and
Une affaire de femmes (1988) -
are also set in Nazi Occupied France. Based on the memoirs of
Gilbert Renault (alias Colonel Rémy), an agent in the Free
French Forces, the film gives an authentic and gripping account of
resistance activities during the Second World War. It may look
like a conventional WWII drama but the film broke new ground by
suggesting that only a small fraction of the French population were
actively involved in the resistance. Previous films merely
promulgated the de Gaulle myth that France had been a nation of
résistants. Three
years before the seismic shock that was Marcel Ophüls's
Le Chagrin et la pitié
(1969), Chabrol's film had already begun to chisel away at the
foundations of this monumental deception.
If Chabrol had had more of a free hand, if he had been less concerned
about a public backlash that might result in yet another box office
flop, the chance is this would have been an even more subversive and
revelatory film. The fact of the matter is that, owing to a
string of commercial failures, Chabrol was not in a position to take
such a risk and all he could do was restate what Gilbert Renault had
said in his book. It was Renault who was in the driving seat on this
one, not Chabrol. The characters are too well delineated, some
bordering on outright caricature, and the impression given is that,
whilst resistance fighters were in a minority, these brave few could
count on the support of the whole nation, apart from a few nasty
profiteers and collaborators. None of it quite rings true but,
despite this, Chabrol still manages to turn out a superior wartime
drama - one that is tense, compelling and almost relentlessly bleak.
The only character that has any real substance is the French officer
Pierre, played with characteristic charm and subtlety by Maurice
Ronet. Pierre's philosophy of grudging tolerance towards the
occupying Nazis most closely reflects the 'attentiste' attitude of the
vast majority of the French nation at the time. For Pierre, the
war is already over and he sees no point in further bloodshed for ideas
that ultimately mean nothing. By contrast his wife Mary (a far
from convincing Jean Seberg) is much less defeatist and puts her life
on the line in the service of the resistance. It is only when
Mary has been arrested that Pierre realises that there is something
worth fighting for, that Nazism cannot be allowed to succeed.
Alas, Pierre is in the minority. Every other major player in the
drama looks and behaves exactly as we expect them to. The
resistance supporters are so easy to spot it defies belief that they
have not already been rounded up and shot (implying the occupying
Germans are either stupid or lazy). The Gestapo agents are the
usual charmless, leather-coat wearing thugs, as offensively
pantomimesque as the chorus of profiteers and informers whose
villainous intent is so visibly etched on their unattractive
faces. The line of demarcation between the good guys and the
outright scoundrels is more noticeable than that which separates the
region of occupation from the supposedly Free Zone, and it is this
crowd-pleasing simplification which ultimately undermines the film,
weakening its dramatic impact through fear of causing offence.
There are some impressive performances on offer (Noël Roquevert,
Reinhard Kolldehoff and Daniel Gélin are all excellent) but, as
far as character depth is concerned,
La
Ligne de démarcation is only just a few short steps away
from outright farce, in the manner of the British sitcom
'Allo, 'Allo! The ambiguity
of character that is so much a part of Chabrol's oeuvre, his mantra
that people are never quite what they seem and that good deeds are
often a cover for purely selfish intent, is singularly lacking
here. Like President de Gaulle, Chabrol pretends to see things in
black and white, for motives that are not entirely honourable.
The line of demarcation is a totally fictional construct,
a device employed by those who cannot accept that there is good
and evil in us all.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Claude Chabrol film:
La Route de Corinthe (1967)
Film Synopsis
During the Second World War, a small village in the Jura is split in
two by the river Loue, which marks the line of demarcation between Nazi
occupied France and the Free Zone. A French prisoner-of-war,
Pierre, is released to find his chateau converted into a German command
centre. Whilst he is obliged to co-operate with the enemy, his wife
Mary secretly plays a hand in supporting the French resistance.
Tensions are heightened when Gestapo officers arrive in the village in
ruthless pursuit of a pair of Free France agents. After Mary is
arrested, Pierre decides to switch his allegiance...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.