Film Review
With its themes of extortion, betrayal and redemption, Jean-Paul
Sartre's play
La P... respectueuse
lends itself naturally to film noir, and because the story is located
in an American town in the Deep South it made perfect sense for
directors Charles Brabant and Marcello Pagliero to take as their model
the hard boiled noir thrillers that were being churned out on the other
side of the Atlantic. It also made good commercial sense, as
American films noirs were proving highly popular in France after the
war, and many French filmmakers were quick to get
themselves aboard this passing bandwagon.
La P... respectueuse, or
La Putain respectueuse to give it
its full unexpurgated title, was one of the more respectable attempts
to cash in on the popularity of American film noir at the French box
office in the 1950s. Not only does it have a convincing American setting and
an authentic noir look (Eugen Schüfftan's superbly atmospheric
cinematography could not be more noir if it tried), it also has two
glamorous lead actors who are almost a dead-ringer for Gloria Grahame
and Robert Taylor - Barbara Laage and Ivan Desny. (The latters'
scene together in Laage's boudoir is one of the most brazenly erotic
you will find in any French film of this era.) You'd almost swear
that this was the real McCoy, a pukka American film noir perfectly
dubbed into French, and the only thing that gives the game away is the
presence of a certain Louis de Funès in a couple of scenes
(virtually unrecognisable as a decidedly nasty urban thug).
La P... respectueuse has the
distinction of being one of the first French films to tackle head-on
the issues of racial prejudice and racial intolerance, although by
locating the story in America the film seems to imply this is more an
American phenomenon than a French one. The truth was that, at the
time, France was as racially intolerant as the United States, evidenced
by the country's willing complicity in the Holocaust and its subsequent
unwillingness to face up to the consequences of this act.
Sartre's play was supposedly inspired by the real-life story of a gang
of teenage boys (the Scottsboro Boys) who were unjustly prosecuted for
rape in Alabama in 1931, but it may conceivably have been prompted by
concerns over antisemitism nearer to home.
La P... respectueuse and
Michel Gast's similar film
J'irai
cracher sur vos tombes (1959) were ahead of the curve in raising
public awareness about the race issue, and it would be another decade
before American cinema would catch up and deliver as blistering a
condemnation of racial intolerance, with Norman Jewison's
In the Heat of the Night
(1967).
La P... respectueuse
is not only a fine example of a French pastiche of American film noir,
it is also one of the most socially pertinent French films of the
decade. The only disappointment is that its authors opted for a
veiled allusion to France's race problems in a classic genre mould
instead of taking Sartre's play and making it more relevant to
contemporary France - but maybe that would have been just
too provocative.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Whilst taking a train journey in the southern United States, Lizzie McKay,
a nightclub hostess, witnesses the killing of a black man by a
drunken white man. The latter turns out to be the nephew of a
state senator, whose son, Fred, attempts to blackmail Lizzie into
testifying against a black man, charging him with attempted rape.
Finally, Lizzie gives in and signs a declaration which clears the
senator's nephew of murder whilst inculpating an innocent black
man. Chased across town by a lynch mob, the black man takes
refuge in Lizzie's apartment...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.