Film Review
There's an indefinable aura of eastern mysticism to
Maya that makes it one of Raymond
Bernard's more intriguing and beguiling films. Set in the
claustrophobic environs of an old seaport that looks like a weird
conflation of Marseille and Algiers, and filmed in the deliberately
expressionistic manner of an American film noir of the 1940s,
Maya has an oneiric poetry that
sets it apart from every other French film of this period. Taken
from a 1924 play by Simon Gantillon, the plot feels like a hangover of
1930s poetic realism, with some scenes looking as if they have been
lifted wholesale from
Pépé-le-Moko - an
impression that is reinforced by the presence of Fréhel in a
virtually identical role to the one she had played in that film.
Yet, Raymond Bernard is far from being a slavish imitator of what has
gone before. Perhaps inspired by Jean Delannoy's
L'Éternel
retour (1943), he grasps the French noir aesthetic of the
late 30s and gives it a warped Cocteau-eqsue twist, the result being
his most idiosyncratic film, if not his bleakest.
Maya means 'illusion' apparently,
and according to the creepy eastern mystic who keeps cropping up in the
film (Valéry Inkijinoff no less) everything in life is an
illusion. Nothing is real.
The film was certainly a gift for Viviane Romance, as it gave her what
is probably the greatest role of her career - the alluring and
mysterious beauty of the night, Bella. By this stage, Romance was
firmly established as the "vamp par excellence" of French cinema,
pretty well typecast as destructive femme fatales and scheming
manipulators. In
Maya,
she excels in her most enigmatic role, one that sees her transformed
from the archetypal screen prostitute into a real woman by the
redeeming power of love. Never has the actress looked more
beautiful nor more tragic than she does here, apparently free to love
and leave whoever she chooses, but visibly trapped forever in a sordid
milieu from which there is no possibility of escape. It's a part
that a Hollywood actress of the calibre of Joan Crawford or Barbara
Stanwyck would have killed to get, and Romance gives it everything she
has, sparing us nothing. A dark and profoundly unsettling eulogy
to the mystical allure of the female sex,
Maya is quite possibly Raymond
Bernard's most inspired film.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Raymond Bernard film:
Le Cap de l'espérance (1951)
Film Synopsis
When the cargo ship
Saint-Jacques
docks at a seaport, the crew waste no time going ashore to enjoy the
distractions offered by the town. As he wanders the streets after
dark, one of the sailors, Jean, encounters an attractive prostitute,
Bella, whom he mistakes for the one great love of his life. On
the run from the police after killing a man, a steward on another ship
takes refuge in Bella's modest quarters. Jean saves the man from
certain arrest and then embarks on a romantic idyll with Bella.
Discovering true love for the first time, the prostitute is sure that
Jean will offer her a new life, but tragically it is not to be.
Everything in life is a mere illusion...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.