Film Review
Whilst
Samson is far from being director Maurice Tourneur's best work,
it is an engaging drama that provides a powerful indictment of
the moral failings of France's higher bourgeoisie in the early
1930s.
The sins of excessive greed, debauched hedonism and
marital infidelity were endemic in the upper strata of French society in
the years leading up to WWII, inviting strong criticism
from many commentators who saw the destructive consequences
of this culture of decadence.
Marcel L'Herbier had already had his say in his
assault on the world of financial wheeler-dealing,
L'Argent
(1929), and the notorious Stavisky affair had been alluded to in
Pierre Colombier's
Ces messieurs de la Santé (1934).
Jean Renoir's
Le Crime de Monsieur Lange (1936)
also shows us the ugly side of capitalism, in Jules Berry's Monsieur Batala,
but it also presents a more wholesome alternative, in the form of a workers' cooperative.
Samson is grimmer than any of these films, a cogent
morality tale that sets out to convince us that decadence is a path that leads to ruin.
It was adapted from a stage play by the playwright
Henri Bernstein and stars two of the biggest actors in French
cinema at the time - Harry Baur and Gaby Morlay.
Today, the film looks like a somewhat dated melodrama and its moralising is
painfully unsubtle. However, Baur's performance, skilfully combining villainy and
pathos, lends it a dramatic intensity and poignancy which makes it hard
not to sympathise with the tragic plight of his character.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Maurice Tourneur film:
Volpone (1941)
Film Synopsis
Wealth is not enough for financier Jacques Brachart. With his
immense fortune, he intends to buy his way into high society to show
the world what a great man he is. He chooses as his wife
Anne-Marie d'Andeline, who, coming from an impoverished aristocratic
family, can hardly refuse his offer of marriage. He marries for
status, she marries for money, and neither loves the other.
Predictably, Anne-Marie takes a lover, Jérôme Le Govain, a
playboy who owes his wealth to Brachart. When Brachart hears of
his wife's infidelity, he is furious and embarks on a terrible
revenge, at the risk of ruining himself...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.