Film Review
Les Guichets du Louvre is
significant in that it was the first film to depict one of the grimmest
episodes in French history, the round up of Parisian Jews by the French
police in 1942. At the time the film was first seen, this was
still a taboo subject in France and so naturally the film acquired a
certain notoriety. Its director, the Bulgarian Michel Mitrani,
was no stranger to controversy. In 1960, he had worked on the
groundbreaking French TV current affairs programme
Cinq colonnes à la une,
which included a provocative look at the Algerian situation entitled
Qu'en pense Alger? There have
been many subsequent films on the Vélodrome d'Hiver round-up -
notably Joseph Losey's excellent
Monsieur Klein (1976) - but few
of these have had anything like the impact of Mitrani's. Along
with Marcel Ophüls's uncompromising documentary
Le Chagrin et la pitié
(1969),
Les Guichets du Louvre lifted
the lid on a particularly nasty can of worms, exposing some unpalatable
truths about the Occupation and helping the French nation to come to
terms with its shameful past. It was not the Nazis who dragged
Jewish men, women and children from their homes and shipped them on to
the death camps, it was the French police, acting under orders from a
supposedly autonomous French government.
Les Guichets du Louvre is
based on Roger Boussinot's personal account of his futile attempt to
intervene in the round-up when he was a 20-year-old student at the
Sorbonne. What is most shocking about Boussinot's story is how
ineffective he was at persuading the Jews he tried to save of the
danger they were in. They resemble sheep being meekly led to the
slaughter, choosing to put their faith in the French government (which
would surely do them no harm) rather than a strange young man who might
be a Nazi agent. Mitrani's film powerfully conveys the cruel
irony and pathos of Boussinot's haunting memoirs and only falls down
when it awkwardly overplays the romantic strand of the story.
Although the budgetary constraints are painfully evident (especially in
the opening sequence which is overly reliant on back projection), the
film provides an authentic recreation of the era in which it is set and
achieves a near-documentary realism through its sombre cinematography
and understated performances. It was a brave decision to cast two
inexperienced actors, Christian Rist and Christine Pascal, in the lead
roles, but both deliver the kind of raw, introspective performance the
film needs to avoid slipping into hackneyed melodrama. Pascal is
particularly memorable as the emotionally torn Jeanne, subtly exposing
the inner conflict and confusion that will ultimately drive her
character to her inescapable doom. Whilst Rist fell by the
wayside, Pascal went on to enjoy a distinguished but tragically brief
career in French cinema.
Les Guichets du Louvre may
seem a tad naïve, particularly in its one-dimensional representation of the
persecuted Jews, but, for all
its failings, it still has considerable emotional impact by virtue of
its subject matter. It avoids the more flagrant caricature and
sentiment-milking that have marred more recent film portrayals of the
Vél d'Hiver round-up - such as Roselyne Bosch's
La
Rafle (2007) - and has its own very distinctive dark
poetry. The film may not have the impact it had when it first
went before a cinema audience in the mid-1970s, but it still provides a
potent reminder of France's complicity in the Holocaust and also a
sobering illustration of how good intentions can fail to make any
difference. As Marshal Pétain's face stares out benignly
from posters all over Paris, championing the virtues of home, family
and work, we know that Paul, a shifty looking student who acts like the
Child Catcher from
Chitty Chitty
Bang Bang, hasn't a hope in Hell. Like us,
happy onlookers from the future reflecting on a past horror we cannot change, Paul
must accept his impotence and watch helplessly as the innocents he wants so desperately
to save are rounded up and led to the slaughter. Evil must have its day.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Paris, 16th July 1942. Paul, a young student, has just been
tipped off that the French police are about to begin a massive round up
of Jews in the Saint-Paul district of the capital. Fearing the
worst, he immediately sets about trying to save Jewish people he
encounters in the street, but they are all stubbornly reluctant to
accept his offer of help. Instead, they allow themselves to be loaded
like cattle onto buses for an unknown destination. Finally,
Paul's persistence is rewarded when he comes across a young Jewish
woman who is prepared to put her trust in him. Jeanne agrees to
remove the yellow star that marks her out as a Jew and allows Paul to
lead her across Paris towards the Left Bank, where he hopes to hide her
from the police. But just when Paul feels he has accomplished his
mission, his one small victory slips from his grasp...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.