Film Review
When he began toying with the new medium of film early in the silent
era Sacha Guitry was deeply dismissive of cinema, considering it to be
massively inferior to theatre, where he devoted most of his creative
energies. With the advent of sound, Guitry was finally persuaded
to make his first full-length film, prompted partly by his then wife
Jacqueline Delubac, but also by the realisation that cinema has a
permanency which theatre lacked. Guitry's first film (made under
the supervision of Fernand Rivers) was an
obvious attempt by the writer-director to preserve the memory of his
father's acclaimed stage portrayal of Louis Pasteur in a play which
Guitry had written for his father in 1919. In his time, Lucien
Guitry was one of the most revered actors of the French stage but by
1935, just ten years after his death, he had all but faded from public
consciousness. By modelling his own portrayal of Pasteur on his
father's, Sacha Guitry was able to secure for him the immortality he
felt he was owed.
Pasteur isn't exclusively a
tribute to Lucien Guitry (the director would reserve that honour for a
later film,
Le Comédien (1948)), it
is primarily intended to honour the memory of Louis Pasteur, the French
microbiologist whom Guitry clearly regards as one of the greatest men
who ever lived (and if greatness is measured in terms of human lives
saved from a premature death he is probably right). In an
introduction that would become one of his trademarks, Guitry appears in
person to explain why he feels Pasteur deserves to be honoured with a
biopic (an extremely rare genre at the time). After this, there
are five tableaux, each depicting an important episode in Pasteur's
life, with Guitry bagging virtually all of the dialogue (actually, it's
virtually a monologue) as he turns in one of his most magnetic screen
performances.
It is to Guitry's credit that, whilst he venerates Pasteur to the point
that he practically considers him a saint, he portrays him not as some
immaculate marble hero, but as a being of flesh and blood, prone to
self-doubt, fits of pique and sporadic bursts of affection.
The most memorable scene is the one in which the little boy (Joseph
Meister) to whom Pasteur (illegally) administered an anti-rabies
vaccine returns to visit him at his home. Visibly aged since
their last encounter (just three years earlier), Guitry's Pasteur is
touchingly human, and you'd think that saving the life of one child was
what he considered his greatest achievement. Later on in the
film, Guitry goes to town on the worldwide acclaim that Pasteur
garnered for his discoveries, discoveries that would halt the spread of
diseases and save millions upon millions of lives. But to the
great man of science nearing the end of his life none of this
matters: it is sufficient that he saved one life, and can see the
evidence of this with his own eyes.
Guitry's mise-en-scène is far less worthy of praise than his
performance and for the most part the film feels awkwardly static,
consisting mostly of theatrically blocked compositions. At one
point in the film, Pasteur remarks to his colleagues: "I know that I am
not using the conventional style to which you are accustomed".
There's no doubt this was intended for Guitry's critics, who found
little favourable to say about his stage performances, but
it can also be taken as an auteur's declaration of intent. In
other words, this is how Sacha Guitry is going to make films, and if
you don't like it, tough. Fortunately, cinema audiences did not
share the critics' view and Guitry became a very popular filmmaker.
Portraits of historical personages take up a fair portion of Guitry's
cinematic oeuvre. After
Pasteur,
he directed a number of other biopics (each more ambitious than the
previous one):
La Malibran (1943),
Le Diable boiteux (1948) and
Napoléon
(1955), devoted, respectively, to the opera singer Maria Malibran, the
revolutionary Talleyrand and the military leader-cum-emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte. And then there are the grand historical frescos
-
Les Perles de la Couronne
(1937),
Le Destin fabuleux de
Désirée Clary (1941),
Si Versailles m'était
conté... (1953) and
Si Paris nous était conté
(1956) - in which, with a touch of poetic licence, Guitry brings to
life some of the more colourful people in the French history
books. Whilst these later films are technically more impressive,
and certainly more visually enticing, they seldom do as much justice to
the great historical figure they portray as Guitry's first
biopic.
Pasteur is a
modest film but it is perhaps the finest tribute Guitry could have come up with
for his personal hero.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Sacha Guitry film:
Le Nouveau testament (1936)