Film Review
Of the dozen or so screen adaptations of Paul Féval's famous
novel
Le Bossu, only two
really do justice to the literary source - André Hunebelle's
1960 version (which paired Jean
Marais with Bourvil) and Philippe de Broca's even feistier
1997 version, starring Daniel
Auteuil and Fabrice Luchini. The version that Jean Delannoy
directed in 1944 is all but forgotten, and rightly so, partly because
of its lacklustre cast (Pierre Blanchar is hopelessly miscast as the
swordmaster Lagardère) but mainly because Delannoy couldn't
direct a swashbuckler if his life, indeed the lives of everyone in
France, depended on it. Voilà la preuve.
The only kind of film that Jean Delannoy could capably direct was the
contemporary melodrama. His period dramas are, by and large,
airless, stilted affairs that lack depth and emotional power, and
Le Bossu exemplifies this in
spades. Whilst the film has some artistic merit - the sets and
costumes are authentic, the lighting is beautifully atmospheric - its
poor pacing, weak characterisation and ineptly choreographed action
scenes make it unutterably dull and amateurish. Fine actor though
he was, Blanchar shows no real enthusiasm for the part of
Lagardère and would be indistinguishable from a mummified corpse
if he were placed next to Jean Marais. Paul Bernard is far more
impressive as the villainous Philippe de Gonzague, lighting up the film
in a way that Blanchar singularly fails to do whenever he enters the
frame. Pedestrian and plodding from start to finish, Delannoy's
Le Bossu deserves to be forgotten.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Jean Delannoy film:
La Part de l'ombre (1945)
Film Synopsis
France, 1699. Philippe de Gonzague kills the Duke of Nevers in
the hope of stealing both his wife and his fortune. Having failed
to save the Duke's life, the swordmaster Henri de Lagardère
flees to Spain with his infant daughter Aurore, swearing that one day
he will have his revenge. Years later, Aurore is a grown woman
and Lagardère is ready to put his plan into action.
Disguising himself as a hunchback, he contrives to expose Philippe de
Gonzague's crimes and exact a fitting retribution...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.