Film Review
Encouraged by the success of his directing debut with
La Fille du puisatier (2011),
Daniel Auteuil immediately threw himself into a project which a more
experienced filmmaker would have balked at: a complete adaptation of
Marcel Pagnol's
Trilogie marseillaise,
a series of three stage plays which had previously been committed to
celluloid in the 1930s. Auteuil obviously feels he owes a lot to
Pagnol. It was, after all, his role as Ugolin in Claude Berri's
Jean de Florette (1986), based
on a late Pagnol novel, that made him an international star.
Having grown up in Avignon, the actor-director also shares something of
Pagnol's affinity for la belle Provence, so if anyone can make a
reasonable stab at bringing Pagnol's best known work to a 21st century
cinema audience, that man is probably Daniel Auteuil.
Marius is the first instalment
in Pagnol's three-part saga, first adapted for cinema by Alexander
Korda in 1931. At the time, Pagnol lacked the confidence to
direct the film and its sequel
Fanny, himself, and so he hired
more experienced filmmakers, acting under his close supervision.
Considered one of the first masterpieces of French sound cinema,
Marius
exemplifies Pagnol's genius for observational drama, his characters
engaging and moving us with their small-scale human dramas and
seemingly irresolvable conflicts. Pagnol was never a showy film
director. When he came to make his own films, it was always with
a simplicity that allowed his audience to focus on his characters and
their everyday crises, an approach that remains refreshingly direct and
truthful.
It is this honest simplicity that is sadly lacking in Auteuil's remake
of
Marius. Attractively
shot the film may be, in a way that conveys as much of the beauty and
charm of Provence as Pagnol's own films did, it nonetheless provides a
pretty hollow cinema experience compared with the gut-wrenching ordeal
that Pagnol consistently served up throughout his filmmaking
career. The fault lies not in the performances - Auteuil
assembles a first rate cast, all giving of their best - nor in its
screenplay, which is almost religiously faithful to Pagnol's original
text. What diminishes the film is Auteuil's habit of tacking on
well-worn clichés, using these as an unnecessary garnish to
(presumably) make his film more accessible to a mainstream cinema
audience. The most egregious example of this is the use of
Charles Trenet's contemporaneous song
La
Mer to (lazily) underline Marius' devotion to his first love,
the sea - an unnecessary populist indulgence that leaves a sour
aftertaste in the mouths of true connoisseurs of Pagnol's work.
On the acting front, the film is much harder to fault. As well as
directing the film, Auteuil takes one of the lead roles, César,
and turns in another solid character performance in the part
immortalised by the legendary stage and film actor Raimu (considered by
Orson Welles as the greatest actor of them all). In contrast to
Raimu, whose presence dominates all three parts of the original
Marseille Trilogy, Auteuil does not
monopolise our attention but instead allows his two co-stars to take
centre stage as the star-crossed lovers, Marius and Fanny. Having
been nominated for a César for his role in Bertrand Tavernier's
La Princesse de Montpensier
(2010), Raphaël Personnaz has emerged as one of France's most
promising young actors in recent years, his saturnine good looks and
mercurial charm making him ideal for the part of the bitterly
conflicted Marius. Making her screen debut as Fanny, Victoire
Bélézy has much the same impact as Orane Demazis had in
the original films - she brings such fragility and innocence to her
portrayal that you can scarcely avoid being moved to tears by her
character's plight. Jean-Pierre Darroussin and Marie-Anne Chazel
add further lustre to a well-chosen ensemble - Auteuil could hardly
have come up with a better cast.
If Daniel Auteuil's objective was to take Pagnol's old plays and
present them in a way that is more palatable to a modern cinema
audience, then he has certainly succeeded. His
Marius is a lovingly crafted piece
of cinema that will doubtless arouse a resurgence of interest in Marcel
Pagnol's oeuvre around the world, which is no bad thing. However,
being a remake, it is too easy to make comparisons with the original
and in doing so the flaws in Auteuil's film become abundantly
evident. This is a film that rewards the eyes far more than it
does the heart, and having watched it you feel much more incined to go
and watch the original rather than Auteuil's equally lavish
follow-up.
Marius was
released in France on the same day as its sequel
Fanny.
The third film in the series,
César,
is currently in production and is scheduled to be released in 2014.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Daniel Auteuil film:
La Fille du puisatier (2011)