Film Review
After a promising start to his filmmaking career with such films as
Mam'zelle Nitouche (1931) and
Fanny (1932),
Marc Allégret was considered a safe pair of hands when he was
commissioned to direct this big budget production which featured not
only a prestigious cast but also a substantial location shoot at an
exotic location: Lake Constance in Austria.
Lac aux dames was to be one of
Allégret's biggest films of the 1930s, a popular crowdpleaser
that not only bolstered his own reputation but also brought his
talented young protégée (and off-screen lover) Simone
Simon to the attention of American movie mogul Darryl F. Zanuck.
It was the latter who, newly installed as vice-president of Twentieth
Century Fox studios, gave Simon her ticket to Hollywood within a year
of the film's release.
Lac aux dames is a superior
example of the kind of film melodrama
that could be relied upon to fill the cinema halls in the 1930s.
It was based on the 1927
novel
Hell in Frauensee by
the celebrated Austrian author Vicki Baum, whose subsequent bestseller
Menschen im Hotel had previously
been adapted by MGM as
Grand Hotel (1932). The
dialogue for the film was written by none other than Colette, one of
the most important French novelists and playwrights of the period, now
best known for her 1944 novel
Gigi.
Allégret's penchant for working with highly photogenic
up-and-coming actors (of both sexes) is borne out by the casting of
such talented young performers as Jean-Pierre Aumont, Odette Joyeux and
Rosine Deréan, in addition to the aforementioned Simone
Simon. The most well-known actor in the cast-list, Michel Simon,
is relegated to a comparatively minor supporting role, albeit one that
suits him admirably and allows him to introduce a smattering of
burlesque humour into what might otherwise have been a stodgy piece of
melodrama.
If there is one thing that allows the film to rise above its out-dated
kitsch subject matter it is Simone Simon's show-stealing performance as
the waif-like child of the lake. In a strangely alluring
portrayal that is tantalisingly evocative of her subsequent great roles
in Jean Renoir's
La Bête humaine (1938)
and Jacques Tourneur's
Cat People (1942), Simon
combines a child-like innocence with the subtle eroticism of the classic
noir
femme fatale, but there
is also an otherworldly aspect to her portrayal which gives her
character an enigmatic, ghostlike quality. Perfectly cast
opposite Simon is another charismatic young performer, Jean-Pierre
Aumont, one of the few juvenile actors of his generation to achieve
star status in French cinema, able to hold his own alongside such
screenhogging heavyweights as Raimu and Harry Baur.
Allégret exploits Aumont's immense physical beauty perhaps far
more than any other director dared and allows the actor to give what is
arguably one of his finest performances, one that has a surprising
naturalism and modernity. Aumont is not the only member of the
cast to go topless in this film. The Russian beauty Illa
Meery exposes her upper body for quite a few minutes in one memorable
sequence which would have been unthinkable in Hollywood and was pretty
rare even in France at the time. Meery enjoyed only a short
career before she enlisted in the Soviet secret services; she ended up
working against the Nazis as a spy during WWII.
If
Lac aux dames is somewhat
let down by its plodding narrative and trite melodrama conventions, it
is more than redeemed by Jules Kruger's atmospheric photography, which
brings a haunting Cocteau-esque poetry to the film, most notably in the
exterior location sequences on and around Lake Constance.
Influenced by German expressionism, Kruger's style has an unmistakeable
film noir edge to it, although this is more noticeable in the films he
later made for director Julien Duvivier:
La
Bandera (1935),
La Belle Équipe (1936)
and
Pépé le Moko
(1937). In
Lac aux dames,
Kruger somehow manages to extract from the picturesque Tyrolean
location something of the timeless savage beauty that is to be found in
the work of the great German romantic painter Caspar David Friedrich,
raw landscapes veiled in cold mist and harbouring a grim sense of
foreboding. Whilst the film has, overall, not dated as well as
other great films of the 1930s, its lyrical charms still have
considerable appeal and it remains one of Marc Allégret's most
artistically inspired films.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marc Allégret film:
Sans famille (1934)
Film Synopsis
Éric Heller, an unemployed engineer, finds work as a swimming
instructor at a popular Austrian resort beside the alluring
Lac-aux-dames lake. Éric's good looks and manly physique
make him especially popular with the lady tourists, particularly Dany,
the daughter of a wealthy industrialist named Lyssenhop. One
evening, whilst attempting to swim across the lake, Éric comes
close to drowning but is saved by a mysterious young woman in a rowing
boat. The woman, who is almost a girl, introduces herself as Puck
and takes Éric back to her home, situated on a small island at
the centre of the lake, so that he can recover from his ordeal.
Puck has spent all her life alone with her father, a well-known
recluse, and so takes an immediate liking to the handsome young
engineer. With Puck's help, Éric returns to the mainland
and is soon pursuing a love affair with Dany. He regards Puck as
no more than a friend, although she is infatuated with him.
When Éric asks Lyssenhop for his consent to marry his daughter
he is sent away with a harsh rebuff. Having lost Dany,
Éric's fortunes take a turn for the worse. Penniless and
stricken with a fever, he rejects Puck when she comes to visit
him. When Puck's boat is found abandoned on the lake, Éric
draws the obvious conclusion that he drove her to her death...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.