Film Review
It was whilst he was en route to Antilles to make a documentary that
aspiring film director Jeff Musso met the Irish writer Liam O'Flaherty
and discussed the possibly of making a film together. Immediately
prior to this, O'Flaherty had allowed his cousin John Ford to adapt his
novel
The Informer. Meanwhile,
Musso and made just one film, a documentary
on his former violin instructor Zino Francescatti. O'Flaherty
agreed to work with Musso on the screenplay adaptation of his recently
published novel
The Puritain,
a dark character study about the fanaticism of the self-righteous that
serves as a bleak analogy of political ideology in Ireland of the early
1930s. After this, O'Flaherty and Musso would collaborate on one
other film,
Dernière jeunesse
(1939), based on the writer's novel
Mr.
Gilhooley.
Released at a time when fanaticism was running rife across the
continent of Europe,
Le Puritain
was enthusiastically received by both critics and audiences in
France. It was awarded the second of the recently inaugurated
Prix Louis-Delluc, which was (at the time) the highest accolade a
French film could hope to secure. The previous year, the award
had been won by Jean Renoir's
Les Bas-fonds, and the
following year it went to Marcel Carné's
Le Quai des brumes. One
point of interest is that, across these three films, we see the gradual
emergence of a very distinctive form of French film noir, which came to
be known as
poetic realism (a
phrase that Renoir himself coined in describing his film) Musso's
film represents an intermediate state between the proto-neo-realism of
Renoir's film and the oppressively shadowy noir-scape of Carné's
timeless masterpiece. At the time,
Le Puritain had an immense impact
and was the most controversial of the three films (it was banned
outright by the state of New York) - all of which makes its comparative
obscurity today all the more inexplicable.
Le Puritain is easily Jeff
Musso's most inspired and compelling film, every bit as disturbing as
O'Flaherty's novel. Being an accomplished musician, Musso also
composed the film's score, which adds as much to its distinctive
atmosphere as the moody lighting and claustrophobic sets. After
the war, Musso's career floundered and he spent most of his time making
documentaries (most of which are now forgotten). The success of
his first feature perhaps owes less to Musso's talents as a director
and more to the accomplishments of his cast and crew.
Le Puritain's main selling point is
that it assembles a magnificent cast headed by two of the decade's most
prominent stars, Pierre Fresnay and Jean-Louis Barrault.
As the driven police inspector, who combines an irresistible matinee
idol charm with a subtle aura of malice, Fresnay vaguely resembles
Commissaire Wens, the character he would play in two popular murder
mysteries of the Occupation era,
Le Dernier des six (1941) and
L'Assassin habite au 21 (1942).
Likewise, Barrault's unhinged puritanical freak, in his murderous
violent outbursts, can hardly fail to remind us of the evil Hyde
character he would later play in Jean Renoir's
Le Testament du Docteur Cordelier
(1959). The supporting cast includes some very familiar faces of
the time, including Viviane Romance, Alexandre Rignault, Jean Tissier
and Fréhel (the latter cast, unusually, for her dramatic rather
than vocal talents).
Barrault's overwrought performance may appear somewhat excessive today
(how could anyone fail to mistake him for a deranged murderer?) but it
would doubtless have struck a chord with a cinema audience at a time
when posturing, self-righteous moralists were
three-a-centime. The film's most unsettling aspect is the
near-immunity that Barrault's character secures for himself via a
potent cocktail of moral indignation and passionate religiosity.
Not only does he evade arrest (for an implausibly long time), he very
nearly succeeds in sending an innocent man (whom he judges to be his
moral and intellectual inferior) to the scaffold. It is the power
the self-righteous have to infect others with their delusions that
makes them so dangerous, and this is as true today as it was in the
1930s. The most remarkable thing about Jeff Musso's
all-but-forgotten debut film is how astonishingly relevant it still is
- and how easily we can recognise modern equivalents in the grotesquely
sanctimonious main protagonist, the sort who array themselves in
saintly virtue whilst preaching hatred and division to all who will
listen. Beware the puritan, for the Devil has fewer allies better
suited for his purpose...
© James Travers 2014
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