Film Review
Practically ruined after the commercial failure of his lavish period piece
Nana
(1926), Jean Renoir willingly agreed to direct this conventional melodrama for
the production company
La Société des Artistes Réunis.
Not only did it provide him with some financial security, it also allowed him to further
develop his directorial technique, bringing some discipline to temper his creative impulses.
Whilst not his most inspired work, the film shows characteristics that would become more
noticeable in his subsequent sound films - imaginative camera work, a love of character
and a strikingly humanist approach.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Jean Renoir film:
Sur un air de Charleston (1927)
Film Synopsis
Prince Vlasco becomes so enchanted by the street singer Marquitta that he
leaves his present mistress and takes her as his lover. Love blinds
the prince to the fact that the singer comes from a social milieu that is
way beneath his own. Confident that he can make a respectable lady
of her, he devotes himself to her education, improving her speech and her
manners. Vlasco is devoted to Marquitta, but when a valuable jewel
of his goes missing he immediately suspects his lover and drives her away
from him. Some time later, Vlasco has lost everything - his money,
his title, his self-respect. Now a member of a troupe of dancers, he
barely earns enough to live on.
Fate has been much kinder to Marquitta. Now a famous singer, she enjoys
the wealth and privilege that Vlasco once took for granted. Moved by
what has become of her former lover, Marquitta tries to comfort him and returns
to him the jewel he believed she took from him. Vlasco succumbs to
another outburst of fury, and once again the ill-treated Marquitta takes
her leave of him. Sickened by the injustice of life, the former prince
decides to end his days, but before he can do so Marquitta returns to him
and convinces him that his ill-feeling towards her is undeserved...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.