Film Review
Although too easily overlooked in a body of work that is laden with
sumptuous, fondly remembered classics,
Un revenant is surely one of
Christian-Jaque's most enchanting films, an exquisitely crafted
melodrama that offers both an acerbic social satire and a poignant
reflection on the destructive power of an amorous infatuation.
The film's title is particularly apt as this marked the return of Louis
Jouvet to the big screen after an absence of five years, during which
he was away touring Latin America with his theatre troupe. The film is
based on a true story, the so-called Gillet affair which
rocked Lyonnaise society in the 1920s, and which was the subject of the
novel
Ciel de suie by the
author-journalist Henri Béraud. The similarities between
the film and the novel are slight, but sufficiently noticeable for
screenwriter Henri Jeanson to have been accused of plagiarism.
Béraud received no credit on the film and was not in a position
to contribute to it, as he was at the time in prison, serving a life
sentence for his support of the Vichy government during WWII.
With France in the grip of post-war austerity,
Un revenant was filmed under
extremely difficult circumstances (watch closely and you can see steam
coming out of the actors' mouths, so under-heated were the studio sets), but
this did not prevent it from being a superbly composed piece of
cinema. The moody, high contrast cinematography, redolent of the
poetic realist aesthetic of the 1930s, gives the film an oppressive
mood that is powerfully evocative of the repressive nature of bourgeois
society at its worst. The exterior shots of the mist-shrouded
town of Lyons imbue the film with something of the
haunting poetry of films by René Clair, Marcel Carné and Jean Vigo,
evincing a fragile beauty that is threatened by dark and sinister forces. With its gloomy
mood and intensely cynical
undertones,
Un revenant feels
more like one of Julien Duvivier's films, which is perhaps not
surprisingly as it was scripted by Henri Jeanson, the man who worked
with him on his bleakest film,
Pépé le Moko
(1937).
Un revenant is particularly
well-served by its distinguished cast. Louis Jouvet is fascinating to
watch as he tackles one of his most complex screen portrayals, an
enigmatic outsider who resembles the nomadic hero of a classic
western. Jean-Jacques Sauvage is a man who is clearly motivated
by revenge, a man with a touch of the Machiavellian arch-manipulator about him, and yet
Jouvet plays him not as a villain, but as a likeable avenging angel,
who wins our sympathy when we discern the scars that he carries from an
erstwhile romantic entanglement. As Sauvage's former lover
interest, Gaby Morlay heightens the tragic dimension of Jouvet's
character whilst making her own character appear an even more cruelly
treated victim of circumstances. The final shot of Morlay
watching Jouvet depart is excruciating in its poignancy, marking as it
does the bitter end of Geneviève's dreams for a better
life.
As impressive as Jouvet and Morlay are in this film, their
contributions are virtually eclipsed by that of the young
François Périer, whose portrayal of a young man being
assailed by visceral passions is striking in its
modernity. Périer had appeared in over a dozen films prior
to this, in minor roles, but this is probably the first occasion he had
to demonstrate his ability to convey extreme inner torment and show
that he was an actor of rare ability. Although, on paper, his
character is a pathetic wretch (the archetypal dreamer who will
inevitably emulate Young Werther when his first romance ends in tears),
Périer manages to give him substance and humanity, so that we have no option
but to sympathise and reach for the Kleenex as his world collapses like an under-cooked soufflé.
The supporting cast also has much to commend it. Making her
screen debut is Ludmilla Tchérina, the great ballet dancer who
would subsequently feature in two of Powell and Pressburger's films,
The Red Shoes (1948) and
The Tales of Hoffmann
(1951). At the other end of the range of experience, and shamelessly
stealing every scene she appears in, is Marguerite Moreno, a much-loved
doyenne of stage and screen who had recently triumphed in Louis
Jouvet's theatrical production of Jean Giraudoux's
La Folle de Chaillot.
Christian-Jaque had enormous difficulty directing the 70-year-old
Moreno, since she had a habit of dozing off between takes. The
only way he could make her stay awake was by keeping her tanked up on
beer.
Un revenant was not
well-received when it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 1946,
but it proved to be a modest box office hit, attracting an audience of
three million. Critical reaction to the film was mixed, perhaps
because its resemblance to the poetic realist films of the past made it
appear dated. Today, the film has been all but forgotten,
which is surprising given the pedigree of its cast and its obvious
artistic merits. Whereas many of Christian-Jaque's films are
considered classics -
Les Disparus de Saint-Agil
(1938),
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
(1941),
Fanfan la Tulipe (1952), to
name just three -
Un revenant,
one of his most atmospheric and incisive films, has been sadly
neglected and definitely deserves a fresh reappraisal.
© James Travers 2000
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Next Christian-Jaque film:
D'homme à hommes (1948)
Film Synopsis
Impresario Jean-Jacques Sauvage returns to his home town of Lyons,
ostensibly to stage a new ballet production, but as he renews old
acquaintances it is evident that he has darker motives in mind.
He receives a cold reception from Jérôme Nisard, a driven
businessman who is in severe financial difficulty. Twenty
years ago, Jérôme shot Jean-Jacques to prevent him from
marrying his sister Geneviève. Since, Jean-Jacques have
never stopped loving Geneviève, and he is surprised when he
finds that she is still romantically attached to him, even though she
is married to another man. To save his business from ruin,
Jérôme intends to marry his son François into a
wealthy family, but François, an impetuous dreamer, has other
plans. Aware of Jérôme's machinations, and
seeing an opportunity for revenge, Jean-Jacques Sauvage offers
François work as a set designer with his company. Within
no time, François finds himself drawn to one of the dancers,
Karina, and is soon pursuing a passionate love affair with
her. Needless to say, Jérôme is outraged by
this turn of events, but predictably Jean-Jacques refuses to
intervene. Revenge can be very sweet...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.