Film Review
Mammy is a film that suffers from a severe case of split identity.
It starts out as the worst kind of melodrama (effectively a horrible pastiche
of its superior Hollywood counterpart), flirts with light-hearted comedy-drama,
has a brief dalliance with film noir of the bleakest and bloodiest kind,
and then wraps things up with a typical melodramatic finale.
The film begins with Dr André Pierre (a typically amiable Pierre Larquey)
being summoned to a tiny apartment to attend to a young
couple who have apparently attempted suicide by gassing themselves.
Fortunately, he arrives in time and the couple - Maurice and Marthe - are
soon making a complete recovery in hospital. André and his wife,
affectionately known as Mammy, are expecting the return from Canada of their
wayward grandson, who, coincidentally, is also named Maurice. From
a newspaper report the good doctor learns that the aeroplane on which his
grandson was travelling has crashed, killing everyone on board. Realising
that the shock of this would kill his now blind wife, André decides
to enlist the help of the young couple he saved earlier in a harmless deception.
They will spend some time at his house, passing themselves off as his grandson
and his wife. It seems that the real Maurice was a good-for-nothing
louse who has become mixed up with crooks and gamblers, whilst André
deceived his wife into believing he was a reformed character. Moved
by the old man's story, the young couple agree to set aside their differences
(Marthe hasn't yet forgiven her lover for having an affair with another woman)
and play along with the charade. All goes well until the real Maurice
shows up unexpectedly and demands of his grandfather a huge amount of cash
to pay off his gambling debts. The doctor knows that the only way he
can raise such a sum is to sell his house, and he fears the shock of this
will surely be the death of dear Mammy. Cue the violins.
By this late stage in her career, Gaby Morlay has become a virtual parody
of herself, and far from making you weep her performance is as comfortable
to watch as a meerkat feasting on its own internal organs. Ten years
previously, when she was at the height of her powers as an actress, Saint
Gaby managed to fill cinemas all across Nazi occupied France with her hit
Le Voile bleu (1942), which
is French melodrama at its absolute ickiest, the kind of film which today
is recommended only for chromic insomniacs or diehard masochists (proving
that things
really were
tough for the French during WWII).
Jean Stelli was the man who directed this unpalatable dose of industrial
strength schmaltz, and he also directed Morlay in
Mammy, committing
all the same sins a second time (aided and abetted by Morlay at her most
merciless), and a few more besides.
Even more surprising than the film's bizarre conflation of popular genres
is its castlist, which sees promising newcomers Françoise Arnoul and
Philippe Lemaire teaming up with old timers Morlay and Pierre Larquey.
Needless to say the result looks like a tug-of-war contest between two actors
you can't help loving (Arnoul and Larquey) and two that you wish would get
on a fast rocket to the outer reaches of the solar system and never return
(Morlay and Lemaire). Then there is Michel Jourdan, who momentarily
steals the film in a few notable scenes as the evil prodigal son - although
by wanting to put Madame Morlay out of the way his vile nastiness loses its
edge - some would argue that by attempting such a thing he is merely doing
humanity (or good taste at least) a profound service.
There's some amusement in the fact that Jourdan and Lemaire, two inveterate
carpet chewers, are passing themselves off as the same character - the identity
mix-up both echoes and mocks that of the film in its entirety. Jourdan's
lip curling pantomime villainy is infinitely preferable to Lemaire's manically
gesticulating histrionics. It has to be said that without the delightful
Arnoul and superb-as-ever Larquey
Mammy would be impossible to sit
through. Their benign presence doesn't completely distract us from
all the bad acting that goes on elsewhere but it does at least make it endurable.
Mammy is perhaps the weirdest and most inept melange of soap, farce
and gangster film you can imagine, but it has its good points, albeit
in homoeopathic doses.
© James Travers 2016
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