Film Review
If Abel Gance had any ambitions of being a cinematic revolutionary at
the start of the sound era these surely came crashing down to earth
when his first sound film,
La Fin du monde (1931), was
received with as much enthusiasm as an outbreak of bubonic
plague. This monumental failure not only ruined Gance
financially, it also struck a mortal blow to his self-esteem and for
the rest of his career he became a slave to commercial cinema, making
films, as he put it, "not to live, but so as not to die."
Le Roman d'un jeune homme pauvre
was one of a series of trite melodramas that came Gance's way in the
1930s for which he had next to no enthusiasm but which he was forced
into directing so that he could stay in the business of filmmaking.
If
Le Roman d'un jeune homme
pauvre has an author at all, it is more likely to be its
screenwriter André Mouëzy-Éon than Gance, whose
personal stamp is conspicuous by its absence in all but a few
scenes. Mouëzy-Éon is best known as a playwright, a
writer of comedies and operettas, his best-known piece being the army
farce
Tire-au-flanc.
Octave Feuillet's novel had already been adapted for cinema three
times, most recently by Gaston Revel in 1926, and it would inspire
Ettore Scola for his 1995 film
Romanzo
di un giovane povero.
Gance makes a fair attempt to emulate the realism of Feuillet's novel
and some sequences are strikingly modern in their naturalism.
Unfortunately, the outrageous plot contrivances and some mannered
acting from Marie Bell and Pierre Fresnay (whose on-screen chemistry is
negligible) rapidly drain the film of credibility. André
Baugé, a one time star of the Opéra-Comique in Paris,
crops up, in one of his last film appearances, to contribute a truly
dreadful musical interlude, and it is left to some talented supporting
players (Saturnin Fabre, Pauline Carton, Marcel Delaître) to
rescue the film as best they can. As far as 1930s melodramas go,
this one is reasonably watchable, albeit somewhat dated and unlike
anything you'd expect Abel Gance to put his name to.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Abel Gance film:
Lucrèce Borgia (1935)
Film Synopsis
Maxime Hauterive de Champcey, an impoverished aristocrat, has
difficulty finding work but finally manages to obtain the post of
estate manager to a wealthy family, the Laroques. Within no time,
Maxime has fallen in love with his employers' daughter, Marguerite, but
she repels his advances, believing him to be a fortune hunter.
Maxime is on the point of giving up his post when he learns that he is
the rightful owner of the Laroques'
fortune...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.