Film Review
Les Amoureux sont seuls au monde
provides a welcome interlude between the noirish thrillers and dark
criminal intrigues (
Les Inconnus dans la maison,
Non coupable,
La Vérité sur Bébé Donge)
that director Henri Decoin seemed committed to serving up
throughout the 1940s. A classic melodrama, very much in the
Hollywood mould (you can easily imagine Joan Crawford in the role taken
by Renée Devillers), it reveals a far more sensitive and
romantic side to Decoin than we would ever discern in his other
films. Boasting an impeccable screenplay by Henri Jeanson and a
cast of exceptional ability, this could hardly fail to be one of
Decoin's better films - a compassionate hymn to the tragedy of love,
tinged with that peculiar mellow bitterness which impinges on most of
Decoin's work.
The film begins with one of the more memorably beautiful opening
sequences in the oeuvre of this underrated director, one that harks
back to the delicate romanticism of the poetic realist films of the
1930s. Louis Jouvet and Renée Devillers meet, apparently
for the first time, in a provincial bar. Although their encounter
appears frosty, their body language tells us they are already
intimately acquainted. The playacting over, they are revealed to
be a couple who have been happily married for twenty years, and it
seems that nothing will get in the way of their perfect romance.
Then Dany Robin enters the frame and an all to familiar tragedy unfolds
before our eyes. The triangular plot is hardly original but
Jeanson and Decoin give it a freshness and poignancy that makes the
final shot - a flagrant homage to that of Michael Curtiz's
Casablanca
(1942) - utterly heartbreaking. Immediately after this,
Jouvet, Jeanson and Decoin would team up for an altogether different
kind of film, the seductively stylish thriller
Entre onze heures et minuit (1948).
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2015
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Next Henri Decoin film:
Au grand balcon (1949)
Film Synopsis
Gérard Favier is a famous composer who has been married to the
charming Sylvia for almost 20 years. Still deeply in love, they
walk the streets of Paris and, one day, they hear a sonata that
Gérard once wrote, played on a piano in a house.
Gérard is surprised to find that the piano player is a 20
year-old girl named Monelle. Impressed by her talent,
Gérard decides to adopt Monelle as his protégé,
but very soon his interest in her takes a less paternalistic
turn. It is through a gossip magazine that Sylvia learns
about her husband's infidelity but she is uncertain how to
react. After all, he did write a new song for her, "Lovers are
alone in the world..."
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.