Film Review
Although she had made a brief appearance (as a singer) in Jean de
Limur's
La Garçonne
(1936), Édith Piaf's screen career began proper with this
amiable sentimental melodrama that would probably have been lost in the
mists of time had it not been for Piaf's captivating presence and her
rendition of several of her best numbers of the period.
Immediately prior to this, Piaf had made her acting debut on the
Parisian stage in
Le Bel
indifférent, a play written for her by her close friend
Jean Cocteau. In this play, she had starred along side her
partner at the time, Paul Meurisse, who appears in a supporting role in
Montmartre-sur-Seine.
Another of Piaf's handsome protégés, Henri Vidal, was
cast opposite her in the film (at Piaf's insistence) in his first
screen role, here credited as Henry Vidal. The principal cast is
completed by Jean-Louis Barrault (an actor Piaf greatly admired) and
Roger Duchesne, who is best remembered today for playing the lead in
Jean-Pierre Melville's seminal gangster film
Bob
le flambeur (1955).
Directed by Georges Lacombe and scripted by André Cayatte (an
unlikely pairing for a musical romance),
Montmartre-sur-Seine owes its
lyricism and modernity to its extensive use of real location in the
picturesque locale of Montmartre, a quiet district of Paris renowned as
a haven for artists. It's a suitably romantic setting for a
tangled tale of frustrated love, the pains of which are beautifully
expressed by Piaf's extraordinary vocal work. The song
Tu es partout typifies the romantic
street ballad that first made Piaf famous and provides the centre piece
for what could very nearly pass as a biography of the singer's own
tormented life.
Piaf's own thwarted quest for personal happiness is mirrored in the
fate of the character she plays, a dowdy-looking street singer who
finds fame but loses her true love (the man who plays her lover, Henri
Vidal, would die tragically young when his career hit the rocks).
The film's other musical showstopper is
L'Homme des bars, a rare blues
number for Piaf in which she amply demonstrates just why she was the
greatest French chansonnier of her generation. It is an
electrifying sequence that cannot fail to leave the spectator struck
with awe and admiration (although it makes the rest of the film seem
pretty dull and listless). The story may be banal and
unconvincing, but a totally committed performance from one of France's
greatest cultural legends makes
Montmartre-sur-Seine
one of the most enjoyable films to be released during the dark years of
Occupation.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Georges Lacombe film:
Le Journal tombe à cinq heures (1942)
Film Synopsis
In Montmartre, Paris, Michel is in love with Lily, but she only has
eyes for Maurice, a handsome shop assistant. Unaware of Lily's
interest in him, Maurice loves Juliette, but the arrival of another
man, Claude, threatens his budding romance. Rejected by Juliette,
Maurice begins to pay Lily some attention and accompanies her on his
accordion when she sings songs in the streets. Fortune smiles on
Lily and within no time she is a star of the Parisian music hall.
Her only desire is to see Maurice succeed as a musician, but his lack
of talent drives them apart...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.