Film Review
This early sound film from avant-garde French filmmaker Julien Duvivier
contains an odd mix of styles which range from an early attempt at
neo-realism (most noticeable in the location sequences) to a subtly
expressionistic approach that prefigures film noir.
Les Cinq gentlemen maudits is an
unusually experimental work for Duvivier, using long tracking shots and
unusual camera angles (including extensive use of low and high angle
shots) in a way that achieves a striking fluidity and darkly oppressive
mood throughout. High contrast lighting adds to the sinister
atmosphere, with dark shadows conveying a sense of all-pervading menace
which is highly appropriate for the story. These daring stylistic
touches help to compensate for the bland screenplay whose denouement is
all too obvious to anyone who has seen the Sherlock Holmes film
The House of Fear (1945).
Even at this early stage in his career Julien Duvivier was able to
attract high calibre actors and the cast for this film includes three
of the biggest French actors of the decade: Harry Baur, René
Lefèvre and Robert Le Vigan. Baur, a film and stage actor
of enormous repute, had recently starred in Duvivier's
David
Golder (1930), Lefèvre had just become a huge star
thanks to his appearance in the René Clair musical
Le
Million (1931) and Le Vigan would go on to play Jesus Christ
in Duvivier's Biblical epic
Golgotha (1935). The cast
also includes Georges Péclet, a prolific character actor who
would turn to directing in the late 1940s, his films including the
wartime drama
Casabianca
(1951).
Unusually for a French film of this era, most of the film was shot
abroad on location, in the Moroccan towns of Fez, Marrakech and
Moulay-Idriss. This provides the film with an almost
documentary-style realism and authentically exotic feel which audiences
of the time would have appreciated. It is interesting that
Duvivier's next film to be set in North Africa,
Pépé-le-Moko,
would be filmed entirely in the studio (although so convincing are the
sets that you would think it was shot on location). In parallel
with this film, Duvivier shot a German language version,
Die fünf verfluchten Gentlemen
(1931), which starred Anton Walbrook in one of his earliest screen
roles.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Julien Duvivier film:
Allo Berlin? Ici Paris! (1932)
Film Synopsis
Five disparate friends take a boat to Morocco for what they hope will
be a relaxing sightseeing holiday. They arrive in the midst of a
religious festival and immediately provoke the wrath of an old man when
they try to remove the veil of his young female companion. The
old man reveals that he is a sorcerer and promptly puts a curse on the
five men. With relish he announces that within the next
lunar cycle they will all die. Of course, the friends refuse to
take this seriously. But then, one evening, one of their number
accidentally drowns himself. A few days later, another member of
the group, an aviator, dies whilst performing at an air show in
Berlin. It looks as if the old man's prediction is going to come
true. The three remaining friends are going to die, and there is
nothing they can do to prevent it...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.