Film Review
Marius was the first
instalment in a series of classic films scripted by the great French
playwright and film director Marcel Pagnol which came to be known as
The Marseilles Trilogy, or simply
La trilogie. Along with its
sequels,
Fanny
(1932) and
César (1936),
Marius offered an unembellished
slice of life in the southern French port which came as a breath of
fresh air to audiences of the time. What was so refreshing about
the film was its total lack of artifice. The story it tells is a
simple one which anyone who saw it could relate to. It deals with
everyday themes - the rift between parents and their grown-up children,
the pains and practicalities of falling in love, the difficulty of
reconciling personal ambitions with the emotional need for love and
stability.
Marius is
nothing more than old-fashioned soap opera at its simplest and best, an
authentic depiction of ordinary people coping with mundane problems, in
a way that is thoroughly beguiling, without the tawdry contrivance of
melodrama. The film's phenomenal success not only provided a
boost to Marcel Pagnol's career, allowing him to become one of France's
leading independent filmmakers; it also helped to position the auteur
at the heart of French cinema. Its impact can be felt today, in
the unusually high proportion of naturalistic dramas that come out of
France each year, many of which tackle the very same issues.
Marius started out as a
phenomenally successful stage play, first performed in March 1929 at
the Théâtre de Paris. This first production ran for
over 800 performances and established its author Marcel Pagnol as one
of France's most celebrated modern playwrights. The film's
success attracted the attention of Paramount France, a recently created
subsidiary of Paramount Pictures, which was looking for popular stage
plays to adapt into films. The director of Paramount France, Robert T.
Kane, offered Pagnol the substantial sum of half a million French
francs for the film rights to his play, but the writer refused.
Showing uncanny business sense, Pagnol negotiated a far more favourable
deal - he would have complete control over the adaptation of his play
and the casting, and would take one per cent of the profits. As
the film proved to be a massive international hit (earning over eight
million francs in the first two months of its French release), it made
Pagnol a wealthy man and enabled him to set up his own film production
and distribution company, which he based in his beloved home region of
Marseilles.
One source of contention between Paramount and Pagnol was the film's
casting. Paramount wanted to use their contract players - Victor
Francen, Henry Garat and Meg Lemonnier were lined up for the parts of
César, Marius and Fanny - but Pagnol insisted that the actors in
the original stage play be used. Paramount had two concerns -
firstly that none of the actors in the stage play had had much, if any,
experience of film work, and secondly that the imperfect sound
recording equipment of the time may make their strong regional accents
unintelligible to audiences outside Marseilles. Pagnol refused to
give ground and finally got his way, although the hiring of Raimu
presented some difficulty as he was, at the time, under contract with
one of Paramount's biggest competitors in France,
Braunberger-Richebé. Pagnol managed to secure Raimu after
a distribution deal was struck between the two rival companies.
Paramount chose to simultaneously record two other versions of the
film, one in German and another in Swedish, but Pagnol had no input
into these versions.
Although he was very keen to get to grips with the process of
filmmaking, which he saw as essential to the future of the dramatic
art, Marcel Pagnol did not feel qualified to direct
Marius himself, so
Paramount offered the job to Alexander Korda, a Hungarian
émigré who had recently begun working in France after a
successful stint in Hollywood. Korda had never set foot in
Marseilles (and would not do so whilst making the film), but with the
help of his set designer, and working under Pagnol's close supervision,
he succeeded in recreating the ambiance of the busy French port in the
studio. The film was shot in just five weeks, almost entirely in
Paramount France's studio at Saint-Maurice on the outskirts of
Paris. A few shots of Marseilles were recorded on location,
without any of the cast, to establish the setting. One of the
things which Pagnol disliked about the film was its studio-bound
feel. For the two sequels, which were shot in Marseilles, he
would use extensive location filming to achieve a far greater sense of
realism, setting a precedent for all of his subsequent films.
The staggering success of
Marius
was not only good for Pagnol, giving him artistic
freedom he could never had dreamed of, it also made instant stars of
its three lead actors - Raimu, Pierre Fresnay and Orane Demazis - each
of whom distinguished him or herself with an exceptionally moving
performance that brings out the best in Pagnol's devastatingly humane
screenplay. In what was her screen debut, Demazis was
acclaimed as the Lillian Gish of French cinema, providing a model for
other actresses with her strikingly modern portrayal of an ordinary
young woman tormented by very familiar crises of the heart. Raimu
became so sought-after as a screen actor that he had to give up his
stage work, whilst Fresnay found himself an immediate matinee idol and
would soon be called up by Alfred Hitchcock to feature in
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934).
Another notable presence in the film is Charpin, a remarkable character
actor who would become a very familiar face in French cinema in the
1930s, perhaps best remembered as the cowardly informer in Julien
Duvier's
Pépé le Moko
(1937).
Not long after completing his work on
Marius,
Alexander Korda settled in England and found even greater acclaim as
the director of such films as
The Private Life of Henry VIII
(1933) and
Rembrandt (1936),
before making a huge impact as a film producer. Months before the
film version of
Marius was released in October 1931, Marcel Pagnol had
written a sequel for the stage,
Fanny,
which would have its first theatrical performance in December
1931. Lacking
Marius's
male leads - Fresnay was otherwise engaged and Raimu had been dismissed
after a row with theatre owner Léon Volterra -
Fanny was far less successful on
the stage than its predecessor, and its run was curtailed after 400
performances when Pagnol made his film adaptation. The latter was
released to great acclaim in November 1932 - but that's another story...
© James Travers 2001
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