Film Review
With
Non coupable, Henri
Decoin's long journey into night reaches its most abject port of call -
not just dipping its toes into the more fetid cesspools of human
depravity as some of the director's previous films had done, but
positively wallowing in them, just as Decoin's contemporary Julien
Duvivier was wont to do around this time. It was Duvivier's
Panique
(1947) starring Michel Simon that most vividly captured the mood of
cynicism and pessimism that prevailed in France immediately after
WWII. Decoin's
Non coupable,
released eight months later that same year, was even grimmer, with
Simon once again fitted up to play the man driven to his doom by the
darkest and deadliest facets of human nature. In
Panique, Simon was merely a victim
of circumstances; in Decoin's film he is unequivocally the villain; but
in both cases, we see him as someone who is more to be pitied than
loathed, easy prey for those unseen forces of the night that delight in
the devastation they can wreak on a man's soul.
The title is meant in a deeply ironic vein, for the film is not about a
man protesting his innocence, but rather one who craves to be found
guilty. The main protagonist, so perfectly suited for Michel Simon in
his middle years, is a harmless buffoon who discovers he has a knack of
committing the perfect murder. At first, he believes it is his
superior intellect that allows him to fool the police, but he soon
realises that it is simply because he is a likeable idiot that he is
above suspicion. It's a neat inversion of the classic film noir
scenario, in which an innocent man becomes implicated in crimes he had
no hand in and ends up playing the fall guy for the sadistic amusement
of the Fates. In Decoin's film, Simon commits a succession of
pre-meditated murders with the hope that, if he is found out, people
will look upon him with renewed respect. Unfortunately, Simon is
so good at his art, or such an improbable killer, that his genius for
murder will never be appreciated, and once again the Fates have the
last laugh. Simon's ultimate failure, as horrific as it is
tragic, provides the best denouement of any film Decoin directed and
cannot fail to send a shiver down the spine, the darkest ending to the darkest
French film of the decade. Or maybe Decoin intended it to be funny?
The subject of non-expiated guilt is an interesting and daring one for
a French film released so soon after the Second World War. The
painful experience of the Occupation was still widely felt, and would
be for many years yet, but the greater sin - France's willing
complicity in the Nazi Holocaust - was a far more profound cause of
shame and this would weigh heavily on the nation for several more
decades before it finally came to be accepted in the 1970s. We
shall never know to what extent the film's writer Marc-Gilbert Sauvajon
was moved by an awareness of France's war crimes when he was writing
the script, but, by accident or design,
Non coupable can hardly help
looking like some form of dark allegory, one that resonates with the
anguish of a soul burdened by crimes for which atonement is
impossible. The bleakest and most savagely intense of Henri
Decoin's films ends with its protagonist willing to send himself to
Hell for no better reason than vanity. The crime of
Maréchal Pétain was far greater - he was prepared to send
his entire country to Hell for exactly the same reason.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Henri Decoin film:
Les Amoureux sont seuls au monde (1948)
Film Synopsis
Michel Ancelin was once a respected surgeon but now, an embittered
alcoholic, he lives out his declining years as a family doctor in a
dull provincial town in the company of his mistress, Madeleine.
One evening, whilst driving home in a state of intoxication, Ancelin
accidentally kills a motor cyclist. To Madeleine's horror,
Ancelin decides not to report the matter to the police but instead he
makes it appear that the cyclist killed himself by crashing into a
wall. The ruse works and Ancelin is surprised by how easy it is
to get away with killing someone. He is the last person anyone in
the town would mistake for a murderer... Convinced he has a gift
for committing the perfect murder, Ancelin stabs a garage owner to
death on learning that he has been carrying on a secret affair with
Madeleine. Rather than suspect the seemingly inoffensive doctor,
the police look elsewhere and soon conclude they are dealing with a
criminal mastermind. A subsequent murder, committed for reasons
of professional jealousy, persuades Madeleine that she must denounce
Ancelin to the police, but the good doctor has foreseen even this
eventuality. It is time for Madeleine to die...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.