Film Review
Although Jean Renoir had few commercial successes in the 1920s, his
reputation was such that commissions frequently came his way, from
parties who admired both his competence as a filmmaker and his penchant
for innovation.
Le Bled
was the second commission that Renoir was offered by the Societé
des Grands Films Historiques (the first being
Le Tournoi dans le cité,
made immediately beforehand). Intended to commemorate the
centenary of France's colonisation of Algeria, it was funded by the
French government and was scripted with next to no input from Renoir.
All too easily written off as a piece of imperialist propaganda,
Le Bled is among Renoir's least
known and least well-regarded films, but whilst the formulaic
melodramatic plot cannot help inviting a certain amount of derision,
the film does occasionally impress with a few dazzling flourishes of
ingenuity. Renoir's last silent film, it shows a break with the
experimental potpourri that preceded it and anticipates the flurry of
groundbreaking masterworks that were to follow. With the
impressive Algerian landscape serving as an active player in the
drama, something that has the power to shape and define human
character,
Le Bled prefigures
not only Renoir's early flirtation with neo-realism but also his
grander American films, most notably
The
Southerner (1945).
There is precious little sign of the anarchistic, non-conformist
tendency that pervades much of Renoir's early work, so the film
delivers what it was intended to - namely to celebrate French
colonialism and portray it in the most positive light. The
lengthy but beautifully constructed montage sequence that opens the
film and gives it a documentary authority contrasts the traditional
romantic image of Algeria with the present commercial reality, a
thriving agricultural land of opportunity in which the native Arabs and
French settlers live together in perfect harmony. If Renoir had
any misgivings about the film's obvious political leanings, he kept
these to himself - his film elicits a genuine respect for those who
earn their livelihood by toiling on the land, prospering honestly
through a tough but rewarding communion with nature.
In a sequence worthy of Eisenstein, a battalion of French troops (an
allusion to the landing in the Bay of Sidi Ferruch in 1830)
materialises behind two of the characters in the main drama before
dissolving seamlessly into a long line of tractors wending their way
across a bucolic paradise. As a visual interpretation of the
'swords to ploughshares' concept it is both stunningly effective and
hauntingly lyrical, meeting the brief that Renoir was given without
recourse to the kind of blatant pro-imperialist jingoism which a less
balanced filmmaker may have indulged in. The conversion of the
lead male character Pierre, from work-shy man-about-town to committed
land worker, is more difficult to swallow and highlights the film's
main deficiency, a woeful lack of plausible character development.
The film's half-hearted moralising becomes a little wearying in the
dawdling middle section but all is redeemed in the action-packed final
act, which includes the most exciting sequence in Renoir's entire
oeuvre - a feverishly alive gazelle hunt that somehow manages to morph
into an exploit straight out of
The
Perils of Pauline. Presaging a similar sequence in
Renoir's greatest film,
La Règle du jeu (1939),
the hunt is astonishingly effective in capturing the excitement and
thrill of the real thing, with vertiginous P.O.V. tracking shots
(filmed by a camera secured to the back of camel) sweeping across the
landscape in a way that makes the spectator feel as if he or she is an
enthusiastic participant in the chase.
There may be a subtle anti-colonialist message lying just beneath the
surface, but the frenzied montage of greyhounds and human hunters
running inoffensive gazelles to ground is the perfect lead-in to the
sequence that follows, in which the hero Pierre, now in full-on Douglas
Fairbanks mode, rescues his helpless sweetheart from the dastardly
Manuel. And as if that wasn't enough excitement, the villain ends
up being mauled to death by a barrage of deadly falcons, in a way that spookily
presages the most famous scene in Hitchcock's
The
Birds. By the standards of its time, it is a shockingly
violent denouement, particularly as it looks as if a camel ends up
having its eyes pecked out for real.
The film's blend of populist melodrama and western-style action earned
it a fair amount of criticism when it was released in 1929 and it
proved to be only a moderate success. Whilst it is hard to
justify giving
Le Bled a
place alongside Renoir's better films it has more going for it than you
might think. Some mischievous humour lightens an otherwise
routine and predictable melodrama, and the spectacular conclusion, a
full-throttle action finale that is guaranteed to set the heart racing,
alone makes the film worth watching. If Renoir's brief was to
deliver a respectful hymn to French colonisation in the form of a
popular entertainment he certainly succeeded, but the real importance
of
Le Bled lies in how
strongly it prefigures the director's subsequent work, particularly his
move towards a more naturalistic style of filmmaking, with characters
fully integrated with their environment.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Renoir film:
Le Tournoi dans la cité (1929)
Film Synopsis
Pierre Hoffer, a loafer from metropolitan France, is on his way to
Algeria to beg some money off his uncle Christian, a prosperous
farmer. During the steamboat crossing, he meets the beautiful
Claudie Duvernet, who is also bound for Algeria, to attend the reading
of a will of a relative who has recently died. On learning that
Claudie is the sole legatee of a substantial fortune, her cousins
Manuel and Diane conspire against her. Meanwhile, Pierre receives
a cool reception from his uncle, who agrees to help him only if he
spends the next six months working on his farm. On hearing that
Claudie has gone off to inspect the farm she has inherited in the south
of the country, Pierre follows her on the pretext of undertaking some
business for his uncle. He arrives just in time to thwart
Manuel's desperate attempt to abduct the young woman and force her into
marrying him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.