Film Review
Albert Préjean stars as Georges Simenon's famous Parisian
detective in this, the third and last of the Maigret films made by
Continental-Films during the Nazi Occupation of France. By now,
Préjean is comfortably ensconced in the role, although his
portrayal bears scant resemblance to Simenon's creation; if anything,
he comes across as a forerunner of the maverick cop of the 1970s, a
cross-between Dirty Harry and Lieutenant Columbo, albeit one with much
better dress sense. When Préjean's Maigret isn't punching
his chief suspect in the face, he is laying ingenious traps for them,
hoping that by firing off the most banal and idiotic questions ('What
does this do...?') he can elicit signs of guilt. He shows a nasty
misogynistic streak and he even treats his sidekick Lucas (played by
Gabriello as a lumbering, sleep deprived, stuttering fool) as a
doormat. It may not be Maigret as we know it but it's a much
livelier interpretation than the comparatively narcoleptic one that Jean
Gabin would deliver in his turn as the pipe-smoking 'tec in the
following decade.
The character of Maigret was not the only liberty screenwriter Charles
Spaak took when adapting Simenon's popular crime novel
Les Caves du Majestic.
Several character names were changed and some subtle alterations made
to the plot, although the film is broadly faithful to the novel.
It is well known that Spaak had to complete his screenplay in Fresnes
prison, after being arrested by the Gestapo for suspected resistance
activity. Deprived of food whilst incarcerated, Spaak amused
himself by including as many gastronomic references into his script as
he could, which is why much of the action takes place in the kitchens
of the titular hotel and why food is mentioned in almost every
scene. It's best not to watch this film on an empty stomach.
Les Caves du Majestic was the
last of the thirty films made by Continental, the German-run company
that was created in 1940 to give the Nazis some control over the French
film industry during the period of occupation. Although the film
was recorded in February 1944 (the only film made by Continental to be
shot at the rue du Château studios in Neuilly), it was not until
August 1945 that it was released, distributed by the newly formed Union
Générale Cinématographique (UGC). The
popularity of its star, Albert Préjean, guaranteed the film's
success in France, despite its association with the now discredited
Continental (whose logo, significantly, is absent from the credits).
In addition to Préjean, the film boasts a strong cast which
includes stars such as Suzy Prim (looking uncannily like Marlene
Dietrich) and Denise Grey and such talanted character actors as Jacques
Baumer and Fernand Charpin. Baumer gives a particularly fine
performance in this film, stealing its two most crucial scenes -
the famous restaurant scene in which Maigret re-enacts the Judgment of
Solomon, to decide which of the two main murder suspects is the
worthiest father of a little boy; and the scene in which Donge meets
his illegitimate son for the first (and probably only) time. It
is only in these two subtly poignant scenes that director Richard
Pottier shows much enthusiasm for the film; the rest of the film is
directed pretty blandly, with none of the distinctive film noir
stylisation he had employed so effectively on his earlier Simenon
adaptation,
Picpus (1943).
Les Caves du Majestic is probably
the most digestible of Albert Préjean's three Maigret films, but
even though it has a polished screenplay and some highly commendable
performances, it is hardly an inspired production. It pales in
comparison with the best Maigret film to date, Julien Duvivier's
La Tête d'un homme
(1933), in which Harry Baur leaves us in no doubt that he is the
greatest Maigret of them all.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Richard Pottier film:
Destins (1946)
Film Synopsis
Madame Petersen, the wife of a successful Swedish businessman, is
murdered at the Majestic Hotel in Paris and Chief Inspector Maigret is
called in to investigate. Suspicion immediately falls on the dead
woman's one-time secret lover, Arthur Donge, who is revealed to be the
natural father of her infant son Teddy. Maigret is unconvinced of
Donge's guilt but he then discovers that before she died Madame
Petersen was being blackmailed by someone with the initials
'A.D.' It would seem to be an open and shut case, but things are
not always what they seem...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.