Film Review
Desert melodramas were a popular mainstay of French cinema in the 1930s,
although Pierre Billon's
La Piste du sud is a pretty poor example
of the genre. Compared with Julien Duvivier's
Bandera (1935), Jacques Feyder's
Le Grand jeu (1934) and Léon
Poirier's
L'Appel du silence
(1936), it's a pretty undistinguished piece that fails to come alive, in
spite of a mostly excellent cast and a story that has immense potential as
a taut psychological drama. The film is based on a novel of the same
title by the well-known Belgian author Oscar-Paul Gilbert, who had two other
notable novels adapted for cinema around this time - as Robert Siodmak's
Mollenard (1938) and G.W. Pabst's
Le Drame de Shanghaï
(1938), both highly recommended.
Pierre Billon had a long and moderately successful career as a screenwriter
and film director, although he is better known for the films he made in his
later years, notably Raimu's swansong
L'Homme au chapeau rond
(1946) and his stylish excursion into film noir,
Jusqu'au dernier (1957).
Saddled with a mediocre script and inadequate resources, Billon had his work
cut out trying to make anything of
La Piste du sud, and whilst there
are a few notable plus points (the photography is of a high standard throughout,
particularly the location exteriors) the film is poorly paced, poorly structured,
and looks like it was made in far too great a hurry, on a shoestring budget.
Pierre Renoir, René Lefèvre and Jacques Baumer - three extremely
good actors - are totally wasted in incidental roles that add little (if
anything) to the plot, whilst the three leads - Ketti Gallian, Albert Préjean
and Jean-Louis Barrault - manage to destroy the film's credibility with some
disgraceful overacting. Barrault is, surprisingly, the chief offender
and completely gives the game away (does he ever allow us to doubt for one
second that he is not the murderer?) by continually over-egging the pudding.
On the stage, Barrault's face-contorting, wildly gesticulating performance
would have been just about acceptable; on screen it looks hideously over-the-top.
Préjean's lack of ability as a serious screen actor has rarely been
more apparent than it is here, in a role that clearly demands more muscle,
and you wonder how anyone as obviously talentless as Ketti Gallian could
have landed the lead role in a film such as this. On the acting front,
La Piste du sud is pretty well a disaster, and it would have taken
a far more capable director than Pierre Billon to salvage this film.
Henri Verdun's overly emphatic score only makes things worse, totally destroying
the tension in some scenes with its ear-bashing cacophony, and if it wasn't
for Christian Matras's moody photography the film would have pretty well
nothing to commend it.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The location is a French military garrison in Tirzit, a North African stronghold
lost in the Sahara Desert. Olcott, a man who distributes essential
supplies in the region, arrives at the fortress in a desperate state.
Visibly perturbed, he claims to have witnessed the brutal killing of his
colleague, Marchand, by the locals. The fact that the dead man's bullet-ridden
corpse is in his van proves he is not mad. As the fort's commander
Lieutenant Naud attempts to establish the truth, Marchand's young widow,
Hélène, turns up unexpectedly, after a harrowing journey across
the desert during which she narrowly escaped with her life after being attacked.
Intrigued by her husband's death, Hélène continues to harangue
Olcott until, overcome with guilt, he is compelled to reveal the terrible
truth of Marchand's death...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.