Film Review
Augusto Genina already had seventy films to his name before he made the
film for which he is best known today,
Prix
de beauté (1930), a barbed social satire featuring
Louise Brooks at her most radiant. This film is noted for its
particularly bleak ending which anticipates film noir, in both its
composition and its grim fatalism. In the films that Genina made
after this -
Paris-Beguin
(1931) and
Les Amours de minuit (1931) -
the proto-noir impression is felt even more keenly, and in both films
we see the origin not only of French film noir but also poetic realism,
a style of melodrama that would come to predominate in French cinema of
the late 1930s.
It is in
Paris-Beguin that
Jean Gabin first played the kind of role with which he would be most
associated in the first half of his career, that of the doomed
outsider, the essential protagonist of any film noir. At the
time, this was a significant departure for Gabin, from the 'cheeky
chappy' juvenile roles he had played in musical comedies, a hangover
from his days in the French music hall. Whilst he still has a
sympathetic allure, a darker side to Gabin is beginning to
emerge. Already we can see the ambiguous characters that would
define his screen persona in the pre-WWII era. In
Paris-Beguin Gabin had his first
screen appearance alongside an actor who would become a lifelong friend,
the then virtually unknown Fernandel. Right from the moment when
Fernandel first appears in this film, playing the fool with his
customary élan, it is clear that he is destined for greater
things. Although he has a fairly minor role in the proceedings,
as the sympathetic hoodlum Fernandel leaves a lasting impression.
Paris-Beguin deserves to be
better known than it is - two icons of French cinema were born in this
film.
But what became of the female star of the film, the stunning Jeanne
Marnac? This was her only sound film (prior to this she had
appeared in one or two silent films) and it looks as if she devoted
almost her entire career to the stage - fitting then that she should play a
star of the Folies-Bergère in Genina's film, at one point
sporting what is probably the most outrageous headdress in
history. Saturnin Fabre, another highly regarded actor near the
start of his illustrious film career, crops up briefly to show that,
among his achievements, dog handling is not one of them. It is
also worth noting that Fernandel's criminal sidekick Jean-Max, the
villain of the piece, also shared the limelight with Gabin and Fernandel in
Anatole Litvak's
Coeur de lilas (1932).
Echoing
Prix de beauté,
Paris-Beguin juxtaposes two
worlds - one of dreams and illusion, the other of sordid vice and real
human suffering. Gabin's inability to betray his lover, even if
it means he is likely to be condemned for a crime of which he is
innocent, confers on him a nobility that no other character in the
drama possesses - they are all stuck in their respective milieus,
unable to develop nobler feelings. A familiar tale of redemption
through sacrifice,
Paris-Beguin
is not a great film but it transcends the formulaic melodramas of its
time and effectively lays the foundation for film noir.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Jane Diamant is a popular but highly temperamental star at the Paris
night spot Les Folies-Bergère. One evening, a burglar
named Bob breaks into her villa. Seduced by Jane's beauty and
feminine charms, Bob decides to spend the night with her. The
next day, Jane's employer is surprised to find a sudden change in his
star's demeanour. Eros has worked his magic on her.
Meanwhile, Bob has been arrested for murder, a crime of which he is
innocent. He knows that Jane can provide him with the alibi he
needs to prove his innocence, but he refuses to mention her name
through fear of soiling her reputation...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.