Film Review
Souvenirs perdus is easily one
of the best French anthology films (films à sketches), although it
is not one of Christian-Jaque's best-known films. The popularity
of this film and Max Ophüls's
La Ronde, released in France a
few months earlier, created something of a craze for the anthology film
(and not only in France), which was to last well into the next
decade. It is not too hard to see why this kind of film was so
popular: cinema audiences get to watch several different films for the
price of a single ticket, and the short films are sufficiently
different that there is bound to be at least one that you will
like. If one of the stories fails to hit the mark, you only have
to wait twenty minutes or so for the next one to come along.
Given its entertainment potential, it is surprising that the format is
so rarely employed these days.
One of the most respected mainstream filmmakers in French cinema,
Christian-Jaque had no difficulty attracting talent and
Souvenirs perdus has probably the
most prestigious cast list of his entire career. What other film
can boast such a glittering star-studded ensemble as Yves Montand,
François Perier, Suzy Delair, Gérard Philipe, Armand
Bernard, Edwige Feuillère, Pierre Brasseur, Danièle
Delorme and Bernard Blier? No French film enthusiast can avoid
salivating at the prospect of so much talent in one film, and (as was
not always the case for this kind of film), every actor is perfectly
matched to his (or her) role and is given a script worthy of his
talents. The screenwriting team is almost as illustrious as the
one that appears before the camera, with such creative giants as
Jacques Companéez, Henri Jeanson and Jacques Prévert
pooling their collective resources to deliver a very special
end-of-year treat for French cinema audiences in 1950.
Unlike the vast majority of anthology films, each of the segments of
the film was directed by one and the same director,
Christian-Jaque. You might think that this would undermine the
main selling point of the anthology concept, namely that the segments
should be very different both in subject matter and style.
Fortunately, Christian-Jaque was such a versatile filmmaker (as the
most fleeting of glances at his filmography will demonstrate) that you could
almost swear that the four segments of
Souvenirs perdus were directed by
four different filmmakers. And the main appeal of this film is
that the four stories are very different in their approach. The
first is a conventional romantic melodrama, the second a Feydeau-like
farce, the third a film noir psycho-thriller and the fourth a wistful
comedy-drama. Artistically, the one segment that stands out is
the third, in which Christian-Jaque goes Hell-for-leather in his
attempt to imitate Orson Welles. With its dramatic use of harsh
lighting and slanted camera angles, not forgetting an utterly
terrifying performance from Gérard Philipe, this is one of the
most chilling entries in Christian-Jaque's entire oeuvre, and certainly
one of French cinema's best pastiches of American film noir. It
also dispels the myth that the psycho-thriller genre began with
Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960).
Unceasingly entertaining, this is one anthology film that definitely does
not
deserve to be forgotten.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2012
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Next Christian-Jaque film:
Barbe-Bleue (1951)
Film Synopsis
Four forgotten objects in a lost property office each has a story to
tell. An Egyptian statue was a present that Philippe once gave to
his lover Florence. After many years apart, the couple meet up by
chance and spend a happy evening together, but they are too proud to
admit that they have spoiled their lives. A funeral wreath
recalls a far more humorous romantic coupling, that of composer
Jean-Pierre and his devoted admirer Suzy. When her lover abandons
her, Suzy is intent on killing him, but is heartbroken when, through a
misunderstanding, she learns he is already dead. Jean-Pierre's
reprieve proves to be short-lived... A fur-lined cravat tells a
more tragic tale, that of Gérard de Narçay, a dangerous
killer who escaped from a lunatic asylum. On the run from the
police, he encounters a distraught young woman, Danièle, who is
about to kill herself. Fearing that the suicide will draw the
police's attention, Gérard befriends her and for the first time
in his life discovers kindness. Alas, the idyll is not to
last... An abandoned violin is all that remains of Raoul's
happy dream to marry a lonely widow, Florence, and trade his
policeman's uniform for a shopkeeper's apron. To win Florence's
affections, Raoul persuades a handsome young street singer to encourage
her son's attempts to play the violin. Inevitably, Raoul loses
his sweetheart to his younger rival...
© James Travers
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