Film Review
In his celebrated 1948 play
Les
Mains sales, the writer and philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre
succinctly articulated the profound crisis facing Communism in the
aftermath of WWII, and in doing so expressed, in the clearest terms,
his intellectually reasoned ambivalence towards Marxism. The
play's success resulted in an admirable film adaptation a short while
afterwards, produced and directed by Fernand Rivers, who had, over the
past two decades, helmed a series of quality adaptations of literary and
theatrical works, including
Le Fauteuil 47 (1937) and
Cyrano de Bergerac (1946). It
was to be the last film that Rivers directed and, furnished with an
exemplary script and cast, it rates as one of his best. For
anyone interested in gaining an insight into Sartre's ambiguous
political beliefs, and how these tie up with his even harder to pin
down concept of existentialism, the film is essential viewing.
Rivers' moodily noirish adaptation retains the structure of Sartre's
original stage play (including the flashback framing device) and
essentially boils down to a private confrontation between its two main
characters, the young idealist Hugo (Daniel Gélin) and the party
leader he must kill, Hoederer (Pierre Brasseur). These two
protagonists personify the two extremes of Communist thinking that
Sartre was equally adverse to - the uncompromising purist and the
ruthless opportunist. For Hugo, the method by which power is
attained is as important as the ultimate goal of holding power.
By contrast, the older and wiser Hoederer is a pragmatist who knows
that, in the real world, power can only be secured via some pretty
grubby compromises, which include getting into bed with his political
opponents. It is a debate that rumbles on to this date -
can politicial ideology ever be put into practice without betraying the
principles on which it is based?
It is only because he imagines that Hoederer is having an affair
with his wife that Hugo is able to bring himself to murder him, thereby
fulfilling his mission without compromising his political beliefs - or
so he thinks. In the final act, Hugo realises he has been duped
and that Hoederer was killed not for ideological reasons but for
political expediency - to buy his party time to put into effect the
leader's plans. Hugo has been an unwitting pawn in a game of
political chicanery and the only way he can save his honour is by not
denying the lie that his crime was politically motivated. It is
an existential choice that will inevitably result in his death but,
more crucially, it shows the futility of adopting a purely ideological
stance in the pursuit of political power.
By this stage in his career, Pierre Brasseur was becoming used to
playing villains of varying degrees of nastiness, so his casting as the
supposedly treacherous Hoederer is no great surprise (in the
original stage production, the part had gone to a very different class
of actor, André Luguet). Interestingly, Brasseur's
Hoederer is not a raving Stalin-like lunatic but a rather likeable
and humane individual who is committed to achieving good for his
people. By comparison, it is the idealistic Hugo - superbly
played by Daniel Gélin - who seems to be the deluded fanatic, a
man capable of killing another for purely ideological reasons. It
is by arguing with Hoederer that Hugo grows to respect his opponent
and realises the fallacy of his own position. In Sartre's eyes,
both characters are flawed, each a betrayal of Marxist thinking, but
Hugo is at least redeemed by an existential act in which he takes sole
responsibility for his crime. In doing so, he lives up to his
nom de geurre Raskolnikov, the name
he takes from the main protagonist of Dostoevsky's
Crime and Punishment. The
film ends with a memorably haunting close-up of Gélin as he
walks determinedly towards the camera. The expression we see on
his face is not one of failure or fear, but one of implacable calm that
betrays just a glimpse of triumph. It is the expression not of a
condemned man but of one who has been set free.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
In September 1943, Illyria, a country in Eastern Europe, is drawn into
the war against Nazi Germany. Hugo Barine is the privileged son
of a member of the ruling elite but he is so disgusted by the way
ordinary people are exploited by the present régime that he
joins the Proletarian Party, which is committed to the idea of creating
a classless society. On the orders of his superiors, he is tasked
with assassinating the party leader Hoederer, who intends to betray his
party's ideals by forging an alliance with the present government to
put up a united front against the Germans. After the war, the
Proletarian Party will participate in a coalition government which will
strengthen its power base and eventually allow it to become the
governing party. Hoederer's strategy is unacceptable to other
senior members in his party and so he must die. To that end, Hugo
is admitted to Hoederer's household as his personal secretary,
accompanied by his young wife Jessica. Unaware of the threat that
Hugo poses, Hoederer takes a liking to him and the two men soon gain a
mutual respect. Hugo's growing admiration for his victim makes it
increasingly difficult for him to carry out his mission, but when he
sees Jessica in Hoederer's arms he is outraged and shoots him dead
without a moment's hesitation. Having spent the next two years in
prison, Hugo realises he is a marked man. He knows he has one
chance to save himself, by explaining his motives for killing Hoederer
to fellow party member Olga. But much has happened in the past
two years. Hoederer's plans have been put into effect after his
death and now he is hailed as a hero of the party. By denying he
killed the former party leader for personal rather than political
reasons Hugo knows he is signing his own death warrant...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.