Film Review
Is there a film that is more intensely evocative of France under German
Occupation than
Le Corbeau,
the second and most notorious film to be directed by Henri-Georges
Clouzot?
Through its starkly realist portrayal of a small
provincial community being propelled into a maelstrom of fear and
suspicion by a spate of malicious denouncements,
Le Corbeau paints the most vivid
and corrosive picture of Nazi-controlled France. Today it is easy
to see the film for what it is - a flagrant assault on the virulent
tell-on-thy-neighbour malaise that blighted France during the
Occupation, but at the time of its release in 1943 it was extremely
ill-received. The film's most vociferous detractors were,
bizarrely, the high-minded intellectuals of the Resistance, who
characterised it as anti-French German propaganda. Paradoxically,
the German film censors were just as appalled by the film - finding it
immoral and depressing, they forbade its release in Nazi
Germany.
After the Liberation,
Le Corbeau
was banned outright in France, whilst its director was forbidden ever
to make another film again. Fortunately, both interdictions were
lifted in 1947, and Clouzot was able to resume his career with another
landmark thriller,
Quai des Orfèvres,
through the support of the actor Louis Jouvet. Clouzot was just
one of many employees of Continental Films, the German-run company
which made
Le Corbeau, to be
blacklisted after the Liberation. Some - including the film's
stars Pierre Fresnay and Ginette Leclerc - were imprisoned for alleged
collaboration with the Nazis. It is indeed ironic and tragic that
the one film to accurately record the mood of occupied France should be
censured as if it were the work of the Devil. Evidently, the
truth of the Occupation was not one that France was yet ready to face
up to. More than half a century on,
Le Corbeau is widely considered to
be a masterpiece of French cinema, arguably the greatest film to be
made in France during the Occupation. The film was later remade
in America as
The 13th Letter
(1951), directed by Otto Preminger and starring Charles Boyer and Linda
Darnell - needless to say, this isn't a patch on the original.
One of the central ironies of
Le
Corbeau is that it was a film which no one really wanted to
make, and it would probably have never seen the light of day if the
German overseers at Continental had been doing their job
properly. The film's screenplay (first titled
L'Oeil du serpent) was originally
written by Louis Chavance in 1937, based on a widely publicised
real-life poison pen case which took place in the French town of Tulle
in 1917 (perpetrated by a frustrated spinster, Angèle
Laval). (The same incident had previously inspired Richard
Llewellyn's play
Poison Pen,
which was adapted as a British film under the same title in 1939 and
may also have been the inspiration for Agatha Christie's novel
The Moving Finger, first published
in 1942). Chavance wrote the script for La Société
des auteurs du films, whose producers sat on it for several years,
fearing that its subject may be too grim for the period.
Continental Films inherited the script and saw no harm in putting it
into production. Having proven himself to be a very capable
director with his first film,
L'Assassin habite au 21 (1942),
Henri-Georges Clouzot was assigned to direct the film, despite his
misgivings about it. The production of
Le Corbeau proved to be a fraught
experience for just about everyone involved. Clouzot's
perfectionism and lack of sensitivity quickly alienated the director
from his cast and crew, and filming was repeatedly held up by rows and
resignation threats. Fresnay loathed working with Clouzot and was
never at ease throughout the entire shoot. It may have been
the lack of support he received whilst making this film that drove
Clouzot to storm out of Continental just before its release.
The film's traumatic production could be what makes
Le Corbeau such a singularly
disturbing piece of cinema, the strained off-screen tensions somehow
permeating into the finished product to give it an unrelenting
atmosphere of barely contained menace. There is no
comfort whatever to be drawn from the film's familiar setting, a
seemingly idyllic rural town populated by the usual character
types. From the very outset, you cannot help sensing that
something twisted and malignant is lurking behind the semblance of calm
and conformity. Every character has a sinister mystique, a subtle
whiff of malevolence. Anyone and everyone may be the mysterious
letter writer, and none of them is to be trusted. Even the
seemingly irreproachable Dr Germain - Pierre Fresnay at his ambiguous
best - is soon revealed to have dark secrets and may not be what he
seems. As the climate of mistrust and fear grows, like a
spreading contagion, it looks increasingly as though Le Corbeau may not
be an individual but a manifestation of group hysteria, a coalescence
of repressed loathing and evil intent which has the power to tear the
once happy little community to pieces.
The film's key scene is the one in which Vorzet and Germain, the town's
two revered doctors, meet in an empty classroom and discuss the
psychology of the mysterious letter writer. Vorzet (superbly
played by Pierre Larquey, arguably the character actor's finest
performance) is amazed by Germain's simpleminded view of good and evil
and scorns his manichean naivety by pointing to a bare light bulb
hanging from the ceiling. As he sets the glowing bulb swinging like a
pendulum, causing shadows to dance menacingly around the protagonists,
Vorzet asks simply: "Où est l'ombre? Où est la
lumière?" (Where is the darkness? Where is the
light?) Germain has to confront a terrible truth about human
nature - evil has no well-defined frontier; good and evil exist in
everyone. In the film's brilliantly constructed and totally
shocking climax our certainties are further shaken when we realise that
Le Corbeau may not be a flesh-and-blood character. It may instead be a
spirit that passes from one form to another, one minute a twisted
creature that writes poison pen letters, the next the raven-like
silhouette of an old woman who has wreaked a just vengeance. As
in Clouzot's subsequent
Les Diaboliques, we are left
with the distinct impression that evil has been exposed but not
vanquished - like a bacteria or virus, malignancy lingers in the air,
waiting for the recrudescence that will surely come...
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Henri-Georges Clouzot film:
Quai des Orfèvres (1947)
Film Synopsis
The peace of the small French town of Saint-Robin is disturbed by a
sudden outbreak of poison pen letters, which cast vile aspersions on
prominent members of the community. The identity of the
letter writer remains a mystery - the venomous missives are written in
a disguised hand and signed Le Corbeau (The Raven). Dr Germain,
the town's respected gynaecologist, is accused of performing illegal
abortions and of having an affair with Laura Vorzet, the young wife of
one of his colleagues, the psychiatrist Dr Vorzet. Matters come
to a head when a hospital patient commits suicide after receiving one
of the letters, which states he has terminal cancer. The nurse
Marie Corbin is thought to be the culprit when a letter from Le Corbeau
falls from her wreath at her patient's funeral. Amid a public
uproar, the nurse is arrested and the letters stop coming - for a
while. When a second wave of poison pen letters begins, Dr
Germain begins to suspect Denise, the hypochondriac sister of the
town's schoolmaster. Once Denise has convinced Germain of her
innocence, the finger of suspicion points towards the least likely
suspect, Laura, but things are not what they seem. Meanwhile, the
mother of the hospital suicide is hunting Le Corbeau, having resolved
that her son's death should be avenged...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.