Film Review
A great deal has been made of the part that Jean Renoir's 1935
naturalistic melodrama
Toni
played in the development of the neo-realist film. Made almost a
decade before neo-realism began to make its mark on Italian cinema -
through such seminal works as Luchino Visconti's
Ossessione
(1943), Roberto Rossellini's
Rome, Open City (1945) and
Vittorio De Sica's
Shoeshine (1946) -
Toni certainly looks like a
trailblazer, possibly the first film of the sound era to fully embrace
the neo-realist aesthetic. The film was shot entirely on location
in the south of France - Martigues, Bouche du Rhône to be precise
- with the supporting cast made up of ordinary people living in the
area. None of the actors wears make-up and each speaks in the
local dialect. Deep focus, wide-angle lenses are employed to
bring a near-documentary realism to the film and stress the importance
of the location in the story. The only sound that is heard is
that which is directly recorded - none of the dialogue is dubbed and
there is no score. Whilst
Toni
undoubtedly did influence the Italian neo-realists (directly in the
case of Visconti, as he was an assistant on the film) and subsequent
filmmakers (notably the directors of the French New Wave), it was not
the first film to employ these naturalistic techniques. There are
several silent films which exhibit the
characteristics of neo-realism - for example, Jean Grémillion's
Maldone
(1928), Léon Poirier's
Verdun, visions
d'histoire (1928) and Jean Epstein's
Finis terrae (1929). Even
Renoir's earlier film
La Fille de l'eau (1925) has a
neo-realist flavour to it. It can be argued that
Toni hardly counts as a neo-realist
film, since its subject matter is sensationalist melodrama, not
an authentic representation of ordinary life.
What is perhaps more interesting about
Toni is what it reveals about its
director. The film marked a significant point of departure for
Jean Renoir, representing the beginning of a short phase in his career
in which left-wing political concerns would impinge heavily on his
art. In his previous sound films, Renoir had been exclusively
concerned with the problem of the bourgeoisie, mostly in a
light-hearted satirical vein, e.g.
On purge bébé
(1931) and
Boudu sauvé des eaux
(1932). By the mid-1930s, Renoir was becoming far more
politically aware, and far more effusive about the virtues of
socialism. At the time, the greatest fear that the majority of
French people had was that their country would go the way of Germany,
Italy and Spain and end up as a Fascist totalitarian state. The
Great Depression had recently hit Europe like a tsunami and amidst the
ensuing social, political and economic turmoil, it was widely felt that
democracy had had its day. The one hope to counter this dismal
prospect was an uncomfortable alliance between the socialists and the
communists. Renoir, a man of strong egalitarian principles, was one of
many who believed that the age of the proletariat had come, born in the
dying embers of capitalism and the only alternative to Fascism.
Although this would be far more evident in his subsequent films -
Le Crime de Monsieur Lange
(1936),
Les Bas-fonds (1936),
La Grande illusion (1937) and
La
Marseillaise (1938) - Renoir's sudden abandonment of
bourgeois concerns is apparent in
Toni.
This is a film which is set entirely in a working class milieu, with
characters who are, without exception, the epitome of the hard-up
proletarian (to the point of caricature in a few cases). Renoir's
decision to go for extreme realism instead of a more conventional
cinematic style came from a desire to represent the miserable lot of
the rural working class as accurately as possible, to avoid any of the
stock-in-trade artifices that might betray the director's own bourgeois
associations.
In developing his own realist aesthetic, Renoir was influenced by
another notable French director of his time, Marcel Pagnol. An
innovator in his own right, Pagnol had taken the unprecedented step of
creating his own production company and filming all of his films out of
doors, in the countryside around Marseilles. Pagnol was not
himself an advocate of neo-realism; he used the Provençal
setting merely as a kind of outdoor theatre in which to recast the
plays he had previously written for the French stage. The
only one of Pagnol's films which could be legitimately termed
neo-realist is
Angèle (1934), although
even this has its naturalist edge blunted by the director's penchant
for flowery prose and theatrical staging. Like Pagnol, Renoir was
eager to shoot an entire film in a natural setting, but he wanted to go
much further in his imitation of life. He believed that the way
to get to the inner truth of his protagonists was by pushing film
naturalism to its absolute limit, to show life in all its ugly
brutality. When he was shooting the film, Renoir actually went
further than he perhaps should, with the result that two sequences had
to be cut for reasons of good taste - one showing Josepha being
savagely raped by Albert, the other showing Toni pushing Albert's dead
body in a cart. Censorship was just one of the restrictions that
prevented Renoir from achieving his desired aims. Neo-realism
itself presented immense artistic limitations, and these would
ultimately cause the director to abandon this approach and instead
embrace a more stylised kind of cinema, one in which poetry, humour and
realism could be combined to give a far more satisfactory result.
It was through Marcel Pagnol's production company that
Toni was
financed and distributed, so we should not be surprised to
see several of Pagnol's acting associates in the film. The lead role (Toni) was given to the
relatively inexperienced actor Charles Blavette who had previously
appeared in a few of Pagnol's films - incredibly, the actor who was
originally proposed for the part was Fernandel. Other
notable Pagnol collaborators, Edouard Delmont and Andrex, provide the
film with its most polished performances, whilst the less experienced
actors struggle to make their characters believable. Perhaps more
interesting than Toni is the villain of the piece, Albert, superbly
played by Max Dalban. The film makes a great deal more sense when
you realise that Albert and Toni are mirror images of each other
(dare we say the two opposing facets of Renoir himself?). Whereas Toni is undemonstrative,
good-natured and pretty gormless (a sucker in more ways than one), Albert is extrovert, smart and
unremittingly bad (his favourite pastimes include drowning kittens,
being rude to foreigners and knocking up women). Both characters
are victims of personality flaws which are magnified by their inability
to cope with the culture clash that confronts them. Just as the
overtly racist Albert is destroyed by his cruelty, so the insecure
immigrant Toni will find that his goodness is his downfall. The
film's
crime passionel (which
incidentally is based on a true story) appears to be an inevitable
consequence of the racial tensions that exist between the migrant
workers who are looking for a better life and the native French
labourers who fear that their jobs and their women will be snatched
from them. How does the old song go?
Ils viennent jusque dans vos bras,
égorger vos fils, vos compagnes...
Both Renoir and Marcel Pagnol had high hopes for
Toni, but their confidence proved
to be misplaced. The film was one of Renoir's biggest flops
(it barely attracted 100 thousand spectators in its first six months of
exploitation), in spite of some very favourable reviews. The
problem was not that the film was bad (today, it is widely considered
one of Renoir's achievements) but that it simply did not accord
with the cinema-going tastes of the time. What most motivated
audiences to go to the cinema in the 1930s was the prospect of escape
from real life, not a perverse desire to see real life blown up and
projected onto a large screen in front of them. The bitter
travails of the 1940s made it even more difficult for realistic dramas
to find an audience. It can be argued that it was the failure of
French cinema to embrace neo-realism (or indeed any kind of realism) in
the 1950s - the one notable exception being Paul Carpita's
Le Rendez-vous des quais (1955), possibly
the best example of neo-realism
à la française
- that led to the French New Wave and a sudden resurgence of interest
in naturalistic filmmaking. In any event, Renoir seemed not to
have been too perturbed by the public's reaction to
Toni. If anything, this
setback encouraged him to persevere in his daring experiments with
style and form, motivated by a simple desire to capture on film the
exquisite truth of life - to achieve with the camera what his father,
the great impressionist painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir, had accomplished
with the paintbrush. Imperfectly hewn oddities like
Toni with their fleeting
moments of brilliance were to be essential stepping stones
towards Jean Renoir's greatest films.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jean Renoir film:
Le Crime de Monsieur Lange (1936)