Film Review
Jean Grémillon's intense, almost morbid, preoccupation with
amour fou attains
its darkest and most potent
expression in
Remorques, a
hauntingly evocative work in which the overwhelming power of a
passionate love affair is contrasted with another great force of
nature, a violent sea storm raging off the coast of Brittany.
The tow-rope which allows a rescue boat to save another ship from being
swallowed by the waves at the start of the film provides an apt
metaphor for the romantic drama that ensues, with salvage boat captain
Jean Gabin saved from a loveless marriage and tugged to happier shores
by femme fatale Michèle Morgan - or so it seems. The fact
that the aforementioned tow-rope breaks, allowing the rescued ship to
go sailing off into the sunset without so much as a
merci hints at what fate has in
store for the star-crossed lovers as they nonchalantly slip their
moorings and dip their toes in the troubled waters of desire.
The film is based loosely on a novel of the same title by the acclaimed
French writer Roger Vercel, whose previous novel
Capitaine Conan (winner of the Prix
Concourt in 1934) would later be adapted for cinema by Bertrand
Tavernier. Charles Spaak's original screenplay for the film was
rejected by Grémillon's bosses at UFA, who hired André
Cayatte to draft a rewrite. This second version of the script was
ill-received by both Grémillon and his lead actor Jean Gabin,
who insisted that it be rewritten by Jacques Prévert, to put
much more emphasis on the central love affair.
Prévert's poetic realist style was perfectly aligned with
Grémillon's conception of the film and together they succeeded
in crafting one of French cinema's most hauntingly poetic
visualisations of a will-o'-the-wisp love affair.
Grémillon's one stroke of good fortune on this film was his
casting. Jean Gabin was the biggest box office draw in French
cinema at the time and had given the director his first commercial
success with
Gueule d'amour (1937).
Gabin personified the kind of working class hero that features
prominently in Grémillon's films and is particularly well-suited
to play the incorruptible yet emotionally vulnerable male lead in
Remorques. Here Gabin is
partnered with rising star Michèle Morgan, with whom he had
already formed a memorable couple, first in Marcel Carné's
Le
Quai des brumes (1938), and then in Maurice Gleize's
Le Récif de corail
(1938). Morgan's almost ethereal presence, sensual yet also
strangely distant, contrasts perfectly with Gabin's solidity and
ordinariness - together they formed one of French cinema's most
successful screen partnerships, although they would only appear
together in one further films:
La Minute de vérité
(1952). For the other main female role, Grémillon selected
Madeleine Renaud, an actress who represented for him Gabin's female
counterpart, a woman securely anchored in the reality of her working
class milieu. Grémillon would later give Renaud her
greatest role in his pro-resistance, pro-feminist masterpiece
Le Ciel est à vous
(1944).
Grémillon's ambitions for the film were somewhat compromised by
events behind his control. He had originally envisaged shooting
most of the film on location in Brittany, including the dramatic storm
sea scenes. When the latter proved to be impracticable to realise
without drowning his camera operator, he had no option but to record
them, along with the interior scenes, at UFA's Billancourt studios in
Paris. Despite an impressively constructed set, Grémillon
failed to achieve the extreme realism that he sought and, by today's
standards, some of the shots are laughably unconvincing. The
biggest setback however was the outbreak of WWII in September 1939,
which brought an immediate end to the studio shoot. Filming
resumed briefly in May the following year, but was again suspended when
France capitulated to Nazi Germany in June 1940.
Grémillon was able to complete the film during the summer of
1941, allowing it to be released in November 1941, by which time both
of its stars (Gabin and Morgan) had taken up temporary residence in
Hollywood. Despite its troubled production,
Remorques proved to be a massively
popular film and secured Grémillon's place as one of France's
leading filmmakers during its darkest years.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Jean Grémillon film:
Lumière d'été (1943)
Film Synopsis
André Laurent is the captain of a salvage boat
and lives in the Brittany port of Brest with his wife Yvonne. Concealing
a serious illness, Yvonne pleads with her husband to give up his hazardous
job and start a new life with her in another town, but, loyal to his employees,
André refuses. One night, he is called to rescue a merchant
ship in distress. The captain of the distressed ship has no intention
of paying André for the rescue and absconds once the ship has been
towed to safety, leaving behind his wife Catherine. Suspecting that
his marriage is crumbling, André finds himself attracted towards
Catherine...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.