Film Review
It was whilst filming
Finis Terrae
(1929) on the remote Breton islands in the Ushant archipelago that Jean Epstein
came to acquire a profound love for Brittany and its people that would endure
for the rest of his life and become the main inspiration for the final, and
arguably, finest phase of his filmmaking career. For his next Breton
poem,
Mor-vran (a.k.a.
La Mer des corbeaux), Epstein would
base himself on the frighteningly inhospitable island of Sein, a half square
kilometre of barren rock that is home to a handful of fishermen and their
families. Once again, Epstein's striking images of Nature at her most
untamed, as horrific as they are beautiful, instil in the spectator a sense
of wonder and admiration for this strange breed of men and women that can
endure such a brutal existence, prospering in spite of all that the gods
in their most spiteful of moods care to throw down on them.
Mor-vran
is as much a celebration of the resilience of the human spirit as it is a
portrait of Nature at her most unforgiving and capricious.
Epstein underscores the stark otherworldliness of Sein, which really does
seem to exist in another time, one far removed from our own, with a fleeting
stopover in Brest, one of the most populated towns on the mainland of Brittany.
Here, a party of fishermen from Sein are happy enjoying the distractions
afforded by a fair, and one member of the group is apparently delighted when
he wins a cheap item of jewellery for his girlfriend. The fact that
none of these men will reach their homes when they set to sea brings home
the precarious nature of their lives. The next we see of the lucky
sailor who won the necklace is a soggy broken cadaver washed up on the seashore.
When Man plays roulette with Nature he plays for the highest stakes - and
Nature can be an unforgiving adversary when she chooses.
As in
Finis Terrae and Epstein's subsequent Breton films, it is the
sea that embodies Nature at her most violent and mercurial, the central protagonist
in the grimmest of human dramas - calm and beatific one moment, raging with
the fury of an incensed maniac the next. Recurring images of the waves
beating on the coast - waves that threaten not only to engulf but to smash
to pieces everything in their wake - bear witness to the unbounded might
of the ocean. You can but wonder how any living thing can go on clinging
to existence when challenged by such a monstrous onslaught. A distorted
human face peering through the windows of a lighthouse puts into our heads
the idea that the sea has eyes of its own, and sure enough in the next shot
the boiling waters are even more menacing, surging towards the microscopic
island like some demented demonic flotilla. Not only is the sea alive, revelling
in its power; it also seems to be an entity of pure deadly malevolence -
an evil giant that enjoys playing with the puny biological freak that is
homo sapiens.
'The sea can talk', a caption then tells us, although this we already know.
The soundtrack (especially composed for the film by Alexis Archangelsky,
thereby making this Epstein's first sound film) is as laden with menace as
the images that pummel our retinas, and it is just as expressive of the
raw power of Nature, the musical accompaniment building to a harrowing crescendo
as the tempest reaches its dizzying climax of destructive power. Once
the storm has passed, the music collapses into a solemn lament, and from
what we see and hear it seems that Nature is now in the throes of a bitter
remorse, regretting the violent outburst that has caused so much misery and
destruction. In this, the final passage of the film, as widows grieve
and young lovers plan their future, Nature smiles kindly on Man, and you
can almost believe that no storms will come again. The final lingering
shots of a lighthouse standing implacably on the shore and the seas gently
lapping the rocks, purring like a contented kitten, imply as much.
But it is only a lull...
© James Travers 2016
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Next Jean Epstein film:
L'Or des mers (1932)
Film Synopsis
For those who eke out an existence on Sein, one of the smaller islands in
the Breton archipelago, life is unremittingly hard. Who knows how the
inhabitants of this tiny, storm beaten stretch of rock can endure when the
elements are so violently opposed to them, straining their capacity for survival
to the limit with a constant onslaught of wave and wind. Yet survive
they do, with families subsisting on a poor fisherman's wage and coping as
best they can with the dramas that come their way. During a brief stay
in the town of Brest on the mainland, a young fisherman wins a necklace for
his sweetheart back home. Resolved to rejoin their families for the
weekend, he and his fellows set out in their boat, the
Fleur-de-Lisieux,
just before a storm breaks. The storm lasts three weeks and wreaks
havoc on the island. The smashed remains of the
Fleur-de-Lisieux
are strewn on the beach, along with its lifeless human cargo. As women
mourn their loss, others plan their future. This is how it has always
been and will always be, on this little scrap of land forever tyrannised
by the sea...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.