Film Review
Director Maurice Cloche earned his place in posterity with
Monsieur
Vincent (1947), the first French language film to win an
Oscar, but apart from this one cinematic triumph his work is mostly
overlooked, perhaps unjustly. One of his first successes was
Le Petit chose (1938), an engaging
period drama based on Alphonse Daudet's celebrated autobiographical
novel of the same title. Best known for his anthology of rural
stories,
Lettres de mon moulin,
Daudet was one of the most important chroniclers of his time, and in
Le Petit chose he ventured a
poignant account of how the dreams of youth are snuffed out by the
harsh realities of life owing to the socio-political turmoil in France
of the mid-19th century. Cloche's understated film, released on
the eve of WWII, would have struck an immediate chord with the younger
generation, at a time when the future had never seemed so bleak and
uncertain.
It is ironic that the film's lead actor, Robert Lynen, would be one of
the casualties of the conflict that was just over the horizon. A
talented child actor, he first found fame in Julien Duvivier's
Poil
de carotte (1932) and featured in a dozen subsequent films,
including Marc Allégret's
Sans famille (1934) and Robert
Siodmak's
Mollenard (1937). Two
years after his final film,
Cap au
large (1942), Lynen was arrested by the Gestapo after being
active in the French Resistance and subsequently shot whilst imprisoned
at Karlsruhe. Jean Mercanton, who plays Lynen's ill-fated brother
in the film, also met with a premature death, dying from polio at the
age 27 in 1947. Mercanton was only a few weeks old when he made
his screen debut, in
Miarka, la
fille à l'ourse (1920), a film directed by his father
Louis Mercanton and featuring Ivor Novello. Mirroring the
cruel fate of the characters they play in Cloche's film, Lynen and
Mercanton's artistic careers were tragically cut short by the brutal
realities of life. Fortunately, the same was not so for the lead
actress, Arletty, who not only survived the 'years of darkness' but
went on to become one of the enduring icons of French cinema.
It was in Marcel Carné's
Hôtel du nord (1938),
released six months after
Le Petit
chose, that Arletty emerged as one of the great acting talents
of her time, but before this she had appeared in over twenty films,
most typically cast in her habitual role of the sympathetic tart.
In Cloche's film, her earthiness and unadorned sensuality make an
effective contrast with Lynen's angelic naivety, and it is with this
depiction of the corruption of innocence that the film is most
effective. The performances are generally of a high standard (as
befits a quality period piece of this era), with some entertaining
supporting contributions from Charpin and Jean Tissier (the former at
his most toe-curlingly bonhomous, the latter at his most creepily
monstrous). The famous classical guitarist Ida Presti made her one film
appearance here at the age of 14 and Robert Le Vigan crops up in a few
scenes, a model of duplicity if ever there was one - you'd never think
he'd end up as a Nazi collaborator.
Le Petit chose may not be as
memorable as the superb Vincent de Paul biopic that Cloche would direct
after the war, but it is a respectable example of its genre and a
worthy memorial to two talented young actors who were taken well before
their time.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Maurice Cloche film:
Feu sacré (1942)
Film Synopsis
The 1848 revolution in France brings ruin to the Eyssette family, which
is forced to sell a once prosperous business and move to Lyon. As
the younger son Daniel continues his studies at college, his brother
Jacques heads for Paris, where he finds a post as a secretary to a
marquis. Lack of money forces Daniel to abandon his education and
he becomes a supervisor, before being dismissed for
subordination. He moves to Paris, hoping to make his name as a
poet. Here, he falls in love with a singer, Irma Borel, and is
easily lured into pursuing a dissolute life. His reputation in
tatters, Daniel has no option but to give up his dreams of becoming a
poet and accept an offer of work in a porcelain shop. Further
disaster follows when his brother Jacques falls seriously ill...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.