Film Review
Not content with the plot of the novel by Louis Hémon, Marc Allégret
and his co-screenwriter Roger Vadim had a go at sexing it up, introducing
plot and character contrivances that pretty well destroyed the integrity
of the original story and turned it into the most ludicrous of melodramas.
With Vadim shoving his oar in with his customary ineptitude, wrecking just
about everything in sight, the resulting film could only be a pale shadow
of an
earlier screen adaptation
by Julien Duvivier, made in 1934, but Allégret had to go the extra
mile and make casting decisions that would well and truly sink the film.
By this time, Allégret was well past his best but even his most
vehement detractors must have been taken by surprise at how badly his version
of
Maria Chapdelaine turned out, despite its ample budget and the
presence of one of cinema's great icons, Michèle Morgan, in the lead
role.
The film begins well enough, making the most of its stunning location with
some picturesque vistas supplied by accomplished cinematographer Armand Thirard.
Pretty though the film's opening third is, the dearth of substance soon becomes
apparent when Miss Morgan's row of suitors present themselves and enter into
some kind of bizarre private competition to convince us who is the most ill-cast
of the three. Kieron Moore and Jack Watling are at an immediate disadvantage,
both being so badly dubbed that you can hardly help laughing every time they
open their mouths, but it isn't long before Philippe Lemaire convinces us
that he is the most badly chosen of the three, by showing no acting ability
whatsoever. No wonder Morgan looks so desperately wretched throughout
the entire film - having to choose a mate amongst these three would have
driven a lesser woman to suicide.
Having somehow managed the seemingly impossible task of dragging its way
across the dreariest of territory and reached the one hour mark, showing
as much character depth and genuine human feeling as a Soviet propaganda
film (but with far less entertainment value) the film finally goes to pieces
in its final third, losing whatever vestige of credibility is left to it
by plot developments that are so beyond logic you wonder what drugs Allégret
and Vadim were on when they knocked out the script. By this time, you have
given up asking why the characters behave as they do as they clearly have
less sense than a packet of potato crisps, so it hardly matters that they
keep making random decisions that put all their lives in jeopardy for no
good reason.
As the story collapses into a pile of total gibberish you are left as confused
and fatigued as the heroine. Whilst manifestly too old for the part
she plays, Michèle Morgan does
everything she can to salvage
this wreck of a film but in the end even she is overwhelmed by the sheer
scale of the undertaking. The combined onslaught of Roger Vadim and
Philippe Lemaire is enough to make anyone give up the will to live. Just
what possessed an actress of the calibre of Françoise Rosay to appear
in the film, in what is little more than a minor supporting role in which
all she is required to do is die gracefully, is anyone's guess. The
curse of Vadim strikes again.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marc Allégret film:
Julietta (1953)
Film Synopsis
After completing her education in a convent, Maria Chapdelaine returns to
the family farm in Quebec and is happy to be reunited with her childhood
sweetheart Robert Gagnon. Two other men lay claim to Maria's affections
- city boy Lorenzo Surprenant and trapper François Paradis - and the
young woman soon finds herself torn between her three attractive suitors.
It is the brave François that Maria prefers, but whilst he is away
from the area working at a lumber camp, Robert and Lorenzo reveal their feelings
for her. Realising that it is François she loves, Robert writes
to him urging him to return for Christmas. Caught in a blizzard, François
loses his way and dies. Meanwhile, Lorenzo has got himself mixed up
in a bank robbery but decides to return to Maria, knowing that he risks getting
captured by the police. Maria's dilemma is conveniently resolved when
only one of her suitors is left standing...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.