Film Review
Georges Simenon's long association with cinema began in 1931 when he
took the decision to adapt one of his own novels, appropriately one
featuring his famous fictional detective Inspector Jules Maigret.
In the event, he invited Jean Renoir, a director he greatly admired, to
script and direct the film, but under his close supervision.
La Nuit du carrefour was the first
film adaptation of a Simenon novel (it premiered in France in April
1932) and the honour of the first actor to play Maigret on screen went
to Jean Renoir's older brother, Pierre. Although Simenon was not
entirely happy with the film he was so impressed with Pierre Renoir's
portrayal that he intended casting him again as Maigret in a subsequent
film,
La Tête d'un homme, which
he himself would direct. Alas, these plans came to nothing and
the latter film ended up being helmed by Julien Duvivier, with Harry
Baur playing the iconic pipe-smoking 'tec. Between these two
films, Simenon gave his consent to another film adaptation of his work,
Le
Chien jaune (1932), with Abel Tarride in the role of
Maigret, directed by his son Jean. Since, Georges Simenon's
novels have been endlessly adapted for cinema and television throughout
the world, with Maigret portrayed by a remarkable roll call of actors
that includes Albert Préjean, Charles Laughton, Jean Gabin,
Michael Gambon and Bruno Cremer.
Being cinema's first Simenon adaptation and Maigret's first screen
outing,
La Nuit du carrefour
occupies an important place in cinema. Just as significant is its
role in the popularisation of the film policier in the 1930s and the
emergence of a distinctive style which has become intimately wedded
with the genre, film noir. Whilst it is acknowledged that film
noir had its origins in German expressionism, the distinctive murky
atmosphere of Simenon's novels, so perfectly captured in Renoir's film
and emulated in later French films of the 1930s, was also an essential
ingredient in the develepment of the noir aesthetic. The poetic
realism of Julien Duvivier and Marcel Carné had its origins in
La Nuit du carrefour, just as
poetic realism itself would shape and influence much of classic
American film noir.
La Nuit du carrefour is the
least typical and perhaps most surprising of Jean Renoir's films.
It has an eerie, artificial feel that sets it apart from the realist
dramas that Renoir was making around this time and seems to belong to
the same stable as his previous experimental fantasies,
Sur un air de Charleston (1927)
and
La Petite marchande d'allumettes
(1928). The film owes its unreal quality to its almost surreal
setting, a nondescript no mans land situated in the void between rural
and industrial France. The crossroads of the film's title is a
kind of purgatory inhabited by suspicious-looking outsiders with dark
secrets to hide and where it is always night, the incessant rain and
mist drenching the landscape with a mood of unremitting gloom and
foreboding. The murky setting reflects and emphasises the
ambiguity of the characters that become embroiled in the most
convoluted of murder mysteries, and the most ambiguous character of all
is Maigret himself, played with more than a hint of menace by an actor
better known for his villainous portrayals. You would not have
been the least surprised if Maigret had turned out to be the killer
himself.
It is the film's intoxicating, fetid atmosphere that makes it so
fascinating and absorbing. The plot hardly makes any sense at
all, and even Renoir himself admitted that he never quite understood
what it was all about. There have been rumours that reels went
missing after the filming was finished, or that several of the later
scenes were dropped when the money began to run out. Certainly,
there is an obvious lack of narrative clarity towards the end of the
film, as just about every character appears implicated in the crime and
the real culprit seems to have been chosen at random rather than by
logic. Whilst this can be incredibly frustrating for those who
like their murder mysteries to have a nice tidy resolution, it does fit
with the cobweb-like mystique that surrounds the film, with the
objective plotting of the traditional crime novel giving way to a more
subjective mode of expression that abounds with narrative trompe-l'oeils
and dreamlike inconsistencies. The confusion reaches its apogee
in a dramatic car chase filmed mostly from the point-of-view of one of
the drivers. It is a completely superfluous sequence and could so
easily have been cut, and yet it distils the film's haunting oneirism
into one cogent summation of the entire policier genre - a frenzied
contest between good and evil in which the moral boundaries are far
from clear.
Today, it is too easy to overlook
La
Nuit du carrefour, to dismiss it as merely a crudely hewn genre
film, bereft of the poetry and humanity of the timeless masterpieces
that Renoir would turn out on a regular basis later in the
decade. Yet, aside from its importance as a landmark in the
development of the film policier, it is also a film that has its own
distinctive artistic quality. Renoir's most unsettlingly
dreamlike composition, it seems to be a complete inversion of the sunny
impressionism of his father's paintings, showing us not a pretty
reproduction of the surface impressions which seduce the senses and
deceive the mind, but a much darker view of the uglier reality that
lies beneath and which we see clearly only in our dreams. It is
on these gloomy foundations, anchored in the rank swamp of human
depravity, that Renoir would go on to construct his true cinematic
marvels.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Jean Renoir film:
Madame Bovary (1933)