Film Review
This fairly mundane historical melodrama is a world apart from the great works of cinema that earned
Marcel L'Herbier his reputation as one of the leading figures of the French
avant-garde of the 1920s, silent masterpieces such as
L'Homme du large (1920),
Feu Mathias Pascal (1926)
and
L'Argent (1928).
Having neither the astonishing artistic innovation or dramatic scale of L'Herbier's earlier films,
Nuits de feu is a comparatively low-key work which
would be easy to overlook were it not for some fine performances from an
impressive cast. Victor Francen and Gaby Morlay, two of the actors
most strongly associated with the French film melodrama, are on fine form
and bring an emotional realism to the film that makes up for its complacency
in other departments. L'Herbier's half-hearted direction and a fairly lacklustre
script fail to deliver the power and humanity of
the Leo Tolstoy play on which the narrative is based (
The Living Corpse,
previously adapted for cinema by Fyodor Otsep in 1929), although the film is beautifully
shot in a way that prefigures the work of the French poetic realists (Jean
Grémillon, Marcel Carné, Julien Duvivier), adding a sense of
dark foreboding and irony to the proceedings. In common with
most of L'Herbier's films of the sound era, this one fails to leave much of
a lasting impression.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Marcel L'Herbier film:
Entente cordiale (1939)
Film Synopsis
In 19th century Imperial Russia, the state prosecutor Fedor Andreiev is
presiding over the trial of a man who, in a fit of jealousy, killed his wife's
lover. The accused man has a sturdy defence, eloquently put forward
by the brilliant lawyer Serge Rostoff, but in the end the case goes against
him. Found guilty of murder, he is condemned and sent off to Siberia.
Not long afterwards, Fedor Andreiev realises that his own wife is having
an affair with another man. The recent trial gives him an idea that
will allow him to punish both his wife and her lover. He will disappear,
leading people to think he has been murdered. The plan works exactly
as the prosecutor knew it would, but when his wife is charged with his murder
he has a change of heart and decides he must return to save her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.