Film Review
Director Jacques Tourneur made his feature debut with this amiable but
pretty undistinguished comedy, one of four films he made in France
before moving to Hollywood in the late 1930s. Tourneur served his
apprenticeship working as a film editor for his father, Maurice
Tourneur, and would spend the bulk of his career in America. It
is here that he made his best known films, a series of fantasy horror
films made for RKO under the stewardship of producer Val Lewton,
including
Cat People (1942) and
I Walked with a Zombie
(1943). Tourneur was equally capable as a director of film noir
dramas, adventure films and westerns but he rarely ventured into
comedy -
The Comedy of Terrors (1964)
is his only other notable humour fest - so this makes
Tout ça
ne vaut pas l'amour something of a rarity in his filmography.
Marcel Lévesque takes the lead in this uneven mélange of
sentimental comedy and slapstick, although he is pretty well eclipsed
by his two far more charismatic co-stars, Jean Gabin and Josseline
Gaël, to say nothing of the veritable cavalcade of female
grotesques who keep popping up in front of the camera and extract a
laugh at their own expense. Lévesque's heyday was in
the silent era, when he worked for such pioneering directors as Louis
Feuillade, but he remained busy in the early years of sound, lending
his talents to such eminent filmmakers as Marcel L'Herbier, Sacha
Guitry and Jean Renoir. Josseline Gaël also had a busy
career but, despite her astonishing good looks and lively personality,
never lived up to her early promise; she is perhaps best remembered for
playing Pierre Fresnay's wife Irène in
La Main du diable, one of the
last films to be completed by Maurice Tourneur. Even at this
early stage in his screen career it is apparent that Jean Gabin is
destined for far greater things. En attendant Duvivier, he was
habitually cast as the happy-go-looking juvenile, ideally suited for
light rom-coms such as this.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Tourneur film:
Cat People (1942)
Film Synopsis
Renaudin, a pharmacist, takes in Claire, a young woman who is
traumatised by a stillbirth. Attached to her and anxious to make
her happy, Renaudin wants to court her, but she is in love with another
man, Jean, who has a shop next door. Even though it breaks his
heart, Renaudin does not press his suit but allows Claire to marry the
man she loves...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.