Film Review
Like Joseph Mankiewicz's blockbuster
Cleopatra (1963), released just
a few weeks later, Pierre Gaspard-Huit's
Shéhérazade is a film
that clearly suffers from delusions of grandeur, although not on quite
the same studio-bankrupting scale. Mankiewicz's overblown epic
has managed to stand the test of time and is generally better regarded
today than when it was first seen. By contrast, Gaspard-Huit's
lavish period piece has been all but forgotten, despite the beguiling
presence of Anna Karina in the role of the mythical storyteller.
Karina made the film in between her commitments to Jean-Luc Godard -
Vivre
sa vie (1962) and
Bande à part (1964) -
and, filmed in luxuriant widescreen Eastmancolor, she has
never looked more radiant on screen than she does here. Why then
does the film languish in obscurity?
Shéhérazade
commits the same deadly sin as
Cleopatra.
It is a film so caught up in its grandeur that it ends up as a soulless
lump of marble rather than a living sculpture. The production
values can hardly be faulted. The sets and costumes are all works
of art, and there's hardly a shot in the film that is not
breathtakingly beautiful. The desert scenes are particularly
stunning and give the film a visual power similar to that of David
Lean's
Lawrence of Arabia (1962),
which may have been a key influence. But pretty sets and even
prettier photography are not enough to make a great film, and where
Shéhérazade falls
down are in those areas that are needed to bring it to life.
Gaspard-Huit's direction is mechanical and lacks spontaneity, the
acting is either bland or wooden, and the script is almost
totally bereft of depth and human feeling. If the film has any
beauty, it is of a coldly superficial and garish kind, not the kind
that arouses the intellect or stirs the soul.
On the acting front, only Antonio Vilar's performance comes up to
scratch. His Haroun-al-Raschid is a complex, well-drawn, even
likeable character, far more interesting and believable than the other
protagonists, who are little more than thinly sketched
caricatures. Beyond her obvious sensuality, there is very little
substance to Karina's Shéhérazade, and if the actress
appears bored throughout the whole film it's likely because the
characterisation that is foisted on her is thinner than a slice of
waist-watcher's bread. Gérard Barray's Renaud de
Villecroix has slightly more meat on the bone but Barray's miscasting
(he is only good when cast as the villain) prevents us from engaging
with the noble Christian ambassador, no matter what fate and the
vengeful Caliph of Baghdad throws at him.
Somewhat less satisfying than Gaspard-Huit's preceding period films -
Christine
(1958) and
Le Capitaine Fracasse (1961) -
Shéhérazade still
manages to impress with its eye-popping visuals, the highpoints being
an exotic dance performed by Karina (you'll definitely need a cold
shower afterwards) and some fiercely energetic battle scenes.
Does the film deserve to be forgotten? Probably not. Like
Cleopatra, sluggish behemoth though
it is, there's pleasure enough to be had in wallowing in the film's
inflated grandiosity and savouring the divine beauty of its lead
actress.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Pierre Gaspard-Huit film:
Gibraltar (1964)
Film Synopsis
In 809, Charlemagne sends an ambassador, Renaud de Villecroix, to his
equal in power, the Caliph of Baghdad, Haroun-al-Raschid, in the hope of
forging an alliance. Whilst crossing the Mesopotamian desert, De
Villecroix and his party encounter Bedouin raiders who have taken as
their prisoner the Princess Shéhérazade, who was also on
her way to the court of the Caliph, to become his wife. De
Villecroix rescues Shéhérazade and the two fall instantly
in love. On his arrival in Baghdad, the knight dutifully hands
over the princess to Haroun-al-Raschid, who marries her as planned.
The union upsets the Grand Vizier Zaccas, who had hoped that the Caliph
would marry his mistress Shirin, allowing him to overthrow him in due course.
Zaccas takes his revenge by notifying the Caliph about
Shéhérazade's interest in De Villecroix...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.