Film Review
It says something about the strength of Anglo-French relations in the
mid-1930s that one of the most flattering films appertaining to British
colonialism was made in France. That film,
La Route impériale, was the
first in a series of military-themed adventure movies directed by
Marcel L'Herbier around this time and belonged to a popular but fairly
short-lived genre that may be termed 'colonialist melodrama'.
With its exotic locations and tales of old-fashioned heroism, the genre
was as appealing to British and American audiences as it was in France,
and it is interesting to compare Henry Hathaway's
The Lives of a Bengal Lancer (1935)
and Zolta Korda's
The Four Feathers (1939) with
their more pessimistic French counterparts, which included Jacques
Feyder's
Le Grand jeu (1934) and Julien
Duvivier's
La Bandera (1935).
La Route impériale was
based on the 1919 stage play
La
Maison cernée by Pierre Frondaie, which had previously
been adapted for cinema in 1922 as
Det
omringade huset (a.k.a.
The
House Surrounded) by the important Swedish filmmaker Victor
Sjöström. By this time in his career, Marcel L'Herbier
had long surrendered his auteur independence and, like several of his
avant-garde contemporaries (including Abel Gance), had little choice
but to make commercial films for a mainstream audience. Whilst it
is true that L'Herbier's best work was behind him, that there would
never be a film as mind-blowing and monumental as
L'Inhumaine
(1924) or
L'Argent (1928), he remained a
competent and resourceful filmmaker, one who had a knack of making
quality films that appealed to the average man in the street. The
reason why many of his sound films are overlooked today lies not in the
fact that they are poorly made, but rather that they are too intimately
wedded to the era in which they made, and nowhere is this truer than in
his pro-colonialist melodramas and films whose main
raison d'être was to give
France pride in her military, ahead of another likely European war in
the late 1930s.
La Route impériale is
dated on two counts. Most off-putting is its wearisome romantic
intrigue, which has the words 'stale' and 'contrived' stamped all over
it and does nothing other than to weaken an already fragmentary and
cliché-sodden narrative. With some better casting choices,
this may have been less of a problem, but with Pierre Richard-Willm and
Kate de Nagy offering up the poorest possible imitation of a couple who
were once singed by Cupid's fiery darts you can only cringe.
Richard-Willm's tendency to overact and his co-stars inability to show
any emotion whatsoever are a killer combination, lending more than a
touch of absurdity to their scenes together. Thankfully, the
standard of acting elsewhere is far better. Aimé Clariond
especially stands out as the humane and conflicted Colonel Stark,
effectively contrasted by Pierre Renoir's somewhat nastier Major
Hudson. Richard-Willm is generally a capable actor but here he
merely looks like a poor substitute for Charles Boyer.
L'Herbier's adept mise-en-scène and some moody lighting bring a
palpable, almost stifling tension to the film, grimly anticipating the
horrors that the narrative has in store for us. Most impressive
is the camerawork, which shows a rare fluidity for a film of this era,
with long, often complicated, tracking shots helping to sustain the
aura of expectant menace that pervades the film. Location filming
in Algeria adds to the realism of the piece, with the main exterior set
designed for Julien Duvivier's
Golgotha (1935) being reused as
the rebel stronghold of Ksour, spectacularly blown up at the end of the
film.
La Route impériale
is modest compared with L'Herbier's silent masterpieces, but for all
its shortcomings, it leaves little doubt that it was crafted by one of
the masters of the seventh art. And after this full-blooded paean
to British colonialism L'Herbier would be well placed to give
Anglo-French relations a further boost with his propaganda piece
Entente cordiale (1939).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marcel L'Herbier film:
Les Hommes nouveaux (1936)
Film Synopsis
Lieutenant Brent, a young British officer, finds himself in front of a military
tribunal after he is suspected of trading secrets with Iraqi rebels.
Once he has been acquitted, he returns to Iraq to join a regiment that is
tasked with protecting a crucial convoy route to India. Brent
is taken by surprise when he meets up with his former lover, Joyce, who is
now the wife of his garrison's commander, Colonel Stark. He allows
Joyce to decide his fate by drawing a card that will determine whether he
or one of his fellow officers will lead a hazardous assault on the nearby
rebel stronghold of Ksour. Although Brent is chosen for the mission,
it is Joyce's brother Dan Grant who takes his place to safeguard his sister's
honour. This deception leads Major Hudson to suspect that Brent is
a spy working for the rebels. The lieutenant manages to redeem himself
by infiltrating the enemy base and allowing it to be captured.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.