Film Review
Immediately after his impressive wartime drama
Decision Before Dawn
(1951), director Anatole Litvak made a return to France for his next film,
Un acte d'amour , a lavish melodrama which starred the
legendary American actor Kirk Douglas.
The film is based on the novel
The Girl on the Via Flaminia by Alfred Hayes, with the
setting shifted from Italy to Paris shortly after the Allied invasion during
the Second World War.
In stark contrast to the hard edged realism of Litvak's previous Hollywood offerings,
Un acte d'amour shows strong similarities with
the director's earlier romantic dramas, notably his 1936 film
Mayerling. In spite of a somewhat unconvincing
storyline, the film grabs our attention for two main reasons - the alluring deep focus
noir photography (a distinctive feature of Litvak's cinema) and the exceptional performances
from a mixed American, British and French cast.
Opposite Kirk Douglas is the attractive French actress Dany Robin in one
of her first substantial screen roles. Both actors are convincing and bring a
touch of poetic realism to the film, which the cinematographic style helps
to bring out, making this feel rather like a French film from an earlier decade. The supporting
cast includes some other high-profile actors of the period, notably
Serge Reggiani, Gabrielle Dorziat, Fernand Ledoux and Brigitte Bardot
(just a few years before her breakthrough role in Roger Vadim's
Et Dieu... créa la femme (1956)).
British viewers should recognise Leslie Dwyer (a great English character actor with
a distinguished career in film and television) in a small but memorable
comedy role.
One of the first big budget Franco-American productions to be made after WWII,
Un acte d'amour was shot entirely
in France, making good use of real locations in Paris and Villefranche-sur-Mer.
During the filming, Kirk Douglas was to meet Anne Buydens, a press officer who became
his second wife not long after work on the film was completed.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Anatole Litvak film:
Anastasia (1956)
Film Synopsis
Some years after the war, an American, Robert Teller, pays a visit to a seaside town in
the South of France. He casts his mind back to 1944, recalling his time in Paris
immediately after the Liberation. There he met a young woman named Lisa, who had
no family, no money, no papers. Taking pity on Lisa, Robert agrees to share his
room in an inn with her. Lisa's initial hostility towards the American GI soon turns
to affection, much to the disgust of her other admirer, Claude, a Frenchman who bitterly
resents the Americans' presence in his country...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.