Film Review
Gustave Charpentier's popular opera
Louise
(first performed in 1900) gets the full Mack the Knife treatment
(i.e. butchered beyond recognition) in this mediocre film adaptation which
was directed by none other than Abel Gance, the esteemed director of
such landmark epics of the silent era as
La Roue (1923)
and
Napoléon (1927).
Very little of Charpentier's original opera makes it onto the screen,
most of the original sung text being replaced by spoken dialogue or
else cut altogether (with its author's approval), but the end result is
far from being a disaster. Gance's direction may lack the inspired
touch of his previous great films, but the musical numbers are
well executed and the near-expressionistic cinematography which is
employed in the more dramatic scenes creates the appropriate mood of
oppression and parental tyranny.
Louise is significant in that it
was the only musical film that Abel Gance made (if we exclude the
far superior music-themed biopic
Un grand
amour de Beethoven (1936)), and judging by the
outcome it is not hard to see why.
The fact that this was the last film to which the world famous soprano
Grace Moore lent her vocal talents (she died in a plane crash eight
years later) gives it some historical importance. Despite being
patently too old for the character she is playing, Moore gives an
arresting performance which more than compensates for the
deficiencies in the mise-en-scène and writing. The cast includes two
other noteable opera singers, Georges Thill and André Pernet,
both excellent in their respective roles. Appearing here in
supporting roles, Ginette Leclerc and Robert Le Vigan were each on the
cusp of stardom, although both would suffer a career setback after the
Liberation when they were branded Nazi collaborators.
Louise is a long, long way from
being Abel Gance's greatest film and it does very few favours for the fine
opera from which it derives. However, whilst no one could mistake this for
a masterpiece, it does have a certain faded charm and
occasionally surprises with the odd imaginative flourish, such
as Gance's trademark over-layering of multiple images to
capture the spirit of Paris.  A curiosity piece, nothing more.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Abel Gance film:
Paradis perdu (1940)
Film Synopsis
Louise, a young Parisian seamstress, is in love with Julien, a
struggling composer who lives opposite her apartment in Montmartre.
Unfortunately, Louise's parents have a poor opinion of Julien and are
determined that the two young people should not marry. In
the end, Louise becomes tired of her parents' interference in her love
life and moves into another apartment provided by her lover.
Thereafter, Louise and Julien spend an idyllic few months together,
oblivious to the toll that Louise's absence is taking on her
parents. When she learns that her father has fallen ill, Louise
agrees to return to the family home, on the understanding that she will
return to Julien as soon as the present crisis is over. Having
lured her daughter back home, Louise's parents have no intention of
letting her go...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.