Film Review
Le Pays sans étoiles is
director Georges Lacombe's most poetic film, an inspired adaptation of
a novel of the same title by Pierre Véry, first published in
1945. Véry's idiosyncratic novels have given French cinema
some of its enduring classics, including
Les Disparus de Saint-Agil,
Goupi-Mains rouges and
L'Assassinat du Père Noël,
and Lacombe's haunting film deserves a place along side these better
known films. With its central theme of history being bound to
repeat itself, thereby negating the notion of free will, the film
chimes with with some other notable films of this era, including
Les Jeux sont faits (1947) and
L'Éternel
retour (1947), both directed by Jean Delannoy with input
from Jean-Paul Sartre and Jean Cocteau respectively.
Perfectly attuned to the eerie romanticism of the piece is a 23-year-old
Gérard Philipe, quietly imposing in his first major screen role
(prior to this he had bit parts in two films by Marc and Yves Allégret). Making a
jarring contrast with Philipe's innocence and gauche charm is a truly
nasty Pierre Brasseur, who when he is not causing trouble and trying to
work his way into bed with Jany Holt, is seen casually slinging cats
around the set. Brasseur would become renowned for his villainous
portrayals in later years but here he is at his most seductively vile,
charming and loathsome in equal measure. Jany Holt completes this
remarkable trio of talent, and is a model of enigmatic charm, a curious
mix of classic femme fatale and fairytale heroine. Louis Page's
cinematography contributes much to the mystical allure of the film,
seamlessly blending together the parallel story strands in a way that
makes the tragic ending inevitable. The poor quality of the
exterior sets betrays the budgetary limitations somewhat, but other
than this there is not much to fault with this strange and beguiling
film.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Georges Lacombe film:
Martin Roumagnac (1946)
Film Synopsis
After an accident in which he suffers a head injury, Simon Legouge, a
modest notary's clerk, begins to experience a series of strange
visions. Seeing that Simon needs a change of air, his
employer sends him to Spain to deal with an inheritance matter.
During the train journey, Simon seems to recognise the unfamiliar
countryside. Even more bizarrely, when he arrives at his
destination, a village named Tournepique, he feels he knows the people
he meets there. Haunted by a growing sense of dejà-vu,
Simon begins to investigate an unsolved crime that was committed a
hundred years before...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.