Film Review
Marcel Carné's all-consuming love affair with cinema began many years
before he directed his first feature film. Like many youngsters from
his working class milieu, cinema offered an easy escape, although he kept
his rampant cinephilia from his father, who had long decided that he would
follow him in his profession as a carpenter. By the time Carné
came to direct his first full-length film
Jenny
(1936), he had had a long and vigorous apprenticeship, working as an assistant
to such illustrious filmmakers as Jacques Feyder, René Clair and Richard
Oswald. He had also made a number of advertising films (to be screened
in cinemas before the features) with Jean Aurenche and Paul Grimault, and
had had some success as a critic, writing regularly for popular film magazines
such as
Cinémonde,
Hebdo-Film,
Vu and
Film-Sonore.
It was with an impressive documentary short entitled
Nogent, Eldorado
du dimanche (1929) that Marcel Carné first realised his dream
of making his own film at the age of 22. Running to just 18 minutes,
this enchanting gem of a film was shot over a period of several weeks on
a small portable camera which he bought (at a cost of 4000 francs) with money
given to him by a friend, Michel Sanvoisin.
The camera was in fact so rudimentary that it could only record up to six
seconds of footage at a time, but Carné's ingenuity in both the filming
and editing of the shots was such that you would hardly notice this fact.
Carné's skilful and often spectacularly daring use of camera motion
- pans and tracking shots of various speeds and durations - is meticulously
choreographed with motion (of people and objects) within the frame, the result
being a beguiling ballet of images that cohere into a piece of film art of
exceptional unity and fluidity.
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche
isn't just an incredibly valuable social document, recording how ordinary
Parisians enjoyed their leisure time on the banks of the River Marne in that
halcyon age between the wars. It also contains the seeds of Carné's
future work as a professional film director, in particular his intense and
unceasing involvement with the working class people with whom he most identified
and who would occupy a central part in his oeuvre. Unlike some other
directors of his generation (notably Jean Renoir), Carné never gave
up on his proletarian ideals, although this would make him an easy target
for his right-leaning detractors who did their damnedest to portray him as
out of touch during France's heady period of
embourgeoisement
in the two decades following WWII.
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche was first screened at the Studio des
Ursulines in Paris in March 1929 and had a crucial impact on Marcel Carné's
early career. On seeing it, René Clair (one of the leading lights
of the Parisian Avant-Garde) was so impressed that he immediately engaged
Carné to work as an assistant on his first sound film
Sous les toits de Paris
(1930). This then led to Carné assisting on some of Jacques
Feyder's finest films -
Le Grand jeu
(1934),
Pension Mimosas (1935)
and
La Kermesse héroïque
(1935) - on the strength of which Feyder gave him his first opportunity to
direct a commercial feature. By this time, Carné's debut short
had completely disappeared from sight and only resurfaced in the late 1960s,
when its author gifted the only copy he had to the French cultural magazine
L'Avant-Scène Cinéma. Against Carné's express
wishes, the film was provided with a score composed by Bernard Gérard,
and it is in this form that it can be readily viewed today on a number of
internet websites.
Like Jean Vigo's
À propos
de Nice (1930), another remarkable debut film from a filmmaker destined
to become a legend,
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche is an incredibly
impactful piece of
sur le vif film art that leaves no doubt as to
the outstanding genius and humanity of its author. Carné and
Vigo were just two of a 'new wave' of 20-something wannabe film directors
that surfaced in France in the late 1920s and 1930s at a time when the film
industry was reeling under the challenge of the transition to synchronised
sound (others include Pierre Chenal, Georges Lacombe and Jean Dréville).
Their instinctive, more realist approach - the authenticity of which was
attested by the use of small handheld cameras, exclusively outdoor settings
and crude editing techniques - was quite different to the polished intellectual
experimentalism of the Avant-Garde impressionist movement (Marcel L'Herbier,
Abel Gance, Louis Delluc, Jean Epstein, Germaine Dulac, René Clair)
which had virtually run its course by the mid-1920s and ended altogether
with the advent of sound. It also ran counter to another trend, that
of 'filmed theatre', which came to the fore with the arrival of sound thanks
(mainly) to the efforts of Marcel Pagnol and Sacha Guitry. Carné's
short film is a particularly fine example of this and prefigures not only
his own distinctive poetic realist style of the 1930s but also Italian neo-realism
(which actually had its origins in French cinema, via such films as Jean
Renoir's
Toni (1935) and
Les Bas-fonds (1936)).
At first sight,
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche appears to be startlingly
different from the doom-laden atmospheric melodramas that Carné would
go on to make in the mid-to-late 1930s -
Le Quai des brumes (1938),
Hôtel du Nord (1938),
Le Jour se lève (1939).
With its sunny depiction of ordinary Parisian folk making the most of their
one free day in the most idyllic of settings (a semi-rural backwater just
ten kilometres to the east of the heart of the capital). it immediately calls
to mind Robert Siodmak's
Menschen
am Sonntag (1930), a similar (more widely seen) depiction of the
hoi polloi happily enjoying their Sunday freedom. The peaceful
riverside setting and intoxicating sense of
joie de vivre that Carné
captures so effectively evoke Jean Renoir's
Partie de campagne (1936)
(which appears to owe a great deal to Carné's
film), whilst the director's almost obsessive glorification
of the sporting prowess of his fellow countrymen has some obvious common
ground with Leni Riefenstahl's German propagnda piece
Olympia (1938).
(It's a perilously small step from nationalistic pride to Fascistic fervour,
as Carné would find in his subsequent row with Jean Renoir over
Le
Quai des brumes).
One of the most striking aspects of
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche is
that it presents what the ill-fated protagonists of Carné's 1930s
films are always denied - an escape to paradise, albeit one offering simple
pleasures in a little verdant oasis on the edge of the concrete prison that
is Paris. (Ironically, even this little glimpse of Eden would soon be obliterated
with the rise of the private motor car and the inevitable urban sprawl this
would lead to). Look closely, and you may just catch a fleeting glimpse
of the unhappy souls that inhabit Carné's grimmer films - a dejected
young man sitting alone in a busy dance hall, a solitary young woman heading
back home after having spent the entire day collecting wildflowers alone,
a blind accordionist left playing in a deserted street, seemingly unaware
that no one can hear his music (just one example of the wry humour that Carné
periodically shows in the film). These unfortunates are scarcely noticed
(and perhaps they may not be seen at all on a single viewing of the film),
as they are vastly outnumbered by the hoards of happier-looking individuals
who appear to be in their seventh heaven, luxuriating in the delights of
a day of unbounded freedom. It is the joy of the masses that the film
revels in. The private grief of individuals is scarcely discernable
- but it is still there, for those who are sensitive enough to notice it.
It is through some remarkable point-of-view shots that the film is most effective
at allowing the spectator to become totally caught up in the hedonistic exhilaration
of the men and women shown on the screen. The best and most vertiginous
example is the shot where the camera loops through 180 degrees as a man on
a swing projects himself as high into the air as he can go. With its
dramatic montage of fast-moving train shots inter-cut with static images
of deserted city boulevards, the opening few minutes of the film capture
the excitement and anticipation of the masses as they flee the capital, leaving
it looking eerily abandoned and forlorn. Carné's main concern
appears to be in presenting the working class as the absolute pinnacle of
French society, particularly the working class man, whose physical prowess
the film repeatedly underlines with striking images that glorify the male
physique. Close-up shots of lean, well-muscled rowers (presumably filmed
with Carné sitting opposite them in the boat) and long shots taken
from various angles of divers and acrobats flying through the air present
the young adult male as an object worthy of idolatry, the body worshipping
sentiment charged with the same unadorned homoeroticism that surfaces in Carné's
most blatant celebration of
le beau corps masculin,
L'Air de Paris (1954).
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche stands apart in Marcel Carné's
remarkable oeuvre as one of just two documentaries he made (the other being
La Bible (1977), a commission for French television which he reluctantly
accepted at the end of his career). Yet it is an essential part of
his work, anticipating not only his life-long commitment to realist populist
cinema but also his intensely humanist affiliation with the working classes.
The lives of the rich and famous, the great men and woman of history, had
no interest for Marcel Carné. All that mattered to him was ordinary
people coping as best they can with the challenges of everyday life.
If authenticity is the defining quality of his work, this quality can be
found in abundance in
Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche, the film in which
Carné committed himself to capturing on celluloid the world he knew
best and to which he would remain faithful to the end of his days.
© James Travers 2023
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Next Marcel Carné film:
Jenny (1936)