Film Review
La Taverne du poisson couronné may have been scripted by the
legendary Henri Jeanson but it looks like it was flung together in an afternoon
by a team of unimaginative illiterates, the end result being the messiest
conflation of melodrama, thriller and comedy you can imagine. Jeanson
should take some blame for his share in this misfire but his sins are modest
compared with those committed by director René Chanas, who clearly
hasn't a clue what he is doing. Chanas had already directed one
film by this stage -
Le Jugement dernier
(1945) - and would go on to direct another eight before doing the
decent thing and giving up. Not one of his films has stood the test
of time and even a film as star-studded as
La Taverne du poisson couronné
would have a hard time justifying its place in a graveyard television slot,
let alone posterity.
It's a shame that a film that is so unremittingly inept (the poor production
quality of the opening scenes beggars belief) should have been blessed with
such an impressive cast. Michel Simon was at the height of his powers
around this time and showed again and again what a remarkable performer he
was, in such films as Julien Duvivier's
Panique
(1946), Henri Decoin's
Non coupable
(1947) and René Clair's
La Beauté du diable
(1950). Here, as the archetypal old sea dog with a fiery temperament,
he is merely wasted - just a lot of sound and fury signifying sweet Fanny
Adam.
Jules Berry comes off even worse, reduced, in the twilight of
his career, to a grotesque mugging parody of his former self. Anyone
expecting a replay of Simon and Berry's memorable double act in
Le Mort en fuite (1936)
will be sorely disappointed. These are not the only casualties in this
Titanic-like disaster - Blanchette Brunoy, Michèle Martin,
Raymond Bussières and Robert Dalban all end up being lost
at sea.
La Taverne du poisson couronné has
some moments of (probably accidental) hilarity and is as grimly atmospheric
as any French film noir of this era, but it is too slack, sloppy and half-baked
to hold any real interest.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Captain Palmer returns to port with his cargo after an eventful sea journey
in which his seamanship was tested to the limit by a violent storm.
Once on land, he is greeted by his daughter Maria, who has recently married
Léo, the unscrupulous manager of a popular nightclub. When Maria
reveals that Léo has been carrying on an affair with his attractive
singer, Sylvia Corail, Palmer is outraged and hits back by bringing Sylvia
into contact with her previous lover, Pierre. Léo's feud with
Palmer concludes with a violent brawl in which the former is stabbed to death.
Palmer allows Pierre to take the blame for the killing before deciding that
his life is not worth living. He returns to sea for one last adventure...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.