Film Review
A superb cast and some top-notch production values make
Les Héros sont fatigués
one of the most striking examples of French film noir of the
1950s. The international success of
Du rififi chez les hommes
(1955), released a few months previously, brought a new impetus to film
noir in France and films such as this proved immensely popular with
French audiences, laying the foundation for the classic polar which
would come to dominate French cinema in the following decades. The
influence of 1940s American film noir is evident both in the grimly
fatalist tone of the story and in its expressionistic presentation, the
brooding, high contrast monochrome photography conveying a stifling
sense of confinement and ineluctable doom.
Les Héros sont fatigués
was, arguably, the creative highpoint of Yves Ciampi's career as a
filmmaker, although much of the credit for the film's success should go
to his cinematographer Henri Alekan and lead actors. Alekan
achieves a perfect pastiche of classic film noir, in the unlikely
setting of a sweaty African ex-colony, inviting some obvious
comparisons with Michael Curtiz's similarly themed
Casablanca
(1942). Whilst the plot is a little too formulaic and offers few,
if any, surprises, intense performances from the principal actors -
notably Yves Montand, Jean Servais and Curd Jürgens - keep the
audience hooked from the film's slow beginning to its dramatic, and
surprisingly vicious, denouement.
Jürgens is particularly good in this film as the one-time fighter
pilot struggling with a crisis of conscience and was justly rewarded
with the Best Actor award at the Venice Film Festival in 1955.
María Félix is also effective as the feisty femme fatale,
her torrid tumble on the beach with Yves Montand being an
obvious nod to Deborah Kerr's famous clinch with Burt Lancaster in
From Here to Eternity
(1953). Montand's combat physique and introspective persona
ensure that he is perfectly suited for the role of the hard-as-nails
outsider, the archetypal noir hero that he had previously portrayed in
H.G. Clouzot's
Le Salaire de la peur
(1953). The distinguished supporting cast includes Gert
Fröbe, now immortalised as the ultimate Bond villain Auric
Goldfinger, and Gérard Oury, who would later become one of
France's most successful filmmakers, helming such popular hits as
La Grande vadrouille (1966).
Whilst
Du rififi chez les hommes
is still highly regarded, consistently rated as the definitive French
film noir, contemporary films of its kind, such as
Les Héros sont fatigués,
are too easily overlooked. Ciampi's direction may not be as slick
and daring as Jules Dassin's, but his film is nonetheless a highly
respectable pastiche of classic film noir which is all the more
memorable for its atmospheric art design and extraordinary ensemble of
acting talent. The film's ending is both poignant and prophetic -
a potent visual metaphor for the Franco-German reconciliation that
would lay to rest bitter memories of WWII and result in the creation of
the European Economic Community just a few years after the film was
released.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Yves Ciampi film:
Typhon sur Nagasaki (1957)
Film Synopsis
Michel Rivière, a French pilot who served with distinction during
the Second World War, discovers a fortune in diamonds when his aircraft crash-lands
in Africa. Seeing a chance to make an easy fortune, he takes the precious
jewels and heads for Free City, where he immediately sets about looking for
a buyer. To shelter from the oppressive heat, he takes a room in the
town's only hotel, which is managed by Séverin, an alcoholic Frenchman
who was driven into exile after being exposed in his own country as a Nazi
collaborator.
By starting an affair with a black man, Séverin's unfaithful wife
Manuella does little to assuage her husband's rampant xenophobia. Rivière
finds himself attracted to the tempestuous young woman, who comes to see
him as her passport out of her present hellish existence. Fate has
other plans for her, however. As luck would have it, the man who is
sent to recover the lost diamonds is one of the fighter pilots that Rivière
might have been pitted against in the war, a German named Wolf Gerke.
A decade ago, the two men might have been deadly adversaries, but now they
find that they have much in common and a bond of friendship develops between
them. Both resent the fact that their wartime heroics have brought
them nothing, so they agree to keep the diamonds and create their own aviation
company from the sale of the gems. These plans are suddenly placed
in jeopardy when Séverin runs off with the jewels. Knowing that
their future well-being depends on the recovery of the diamonds, Rivière
and Gerke set off in pursuit. It will prove to be a fruitless errand...
© James Travers
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