Film Review
It's not beyond the realm of possibility that Carol Reed saw
Variétés around the
time it was released and kept the main storyline buried in his
subconscious for twenty years before making something remarkably
similar in
Trapeze
(1956). Both films feature trapeze artists, in each case two men
and one woman, which clearly gives scope for our old friend the eternal
triangle. I would argue that Farkas not only got there first but
made a better fist of it than Reed, not too hard given that he was
working with Jean Gabin who was just about ready to peak.
This was Gabin's twentieth film and although he had several notable
films under his belt -
Zouzou,
Maria Chapdelaine,
La Bandera, etc. - it was the
string of successes that followed
Variétés
which would catapult him to Number One at the French box office and
make him a name outside France. These include:
La Belle équipe,
Pépé le Moko,
La Grande illusion,
Gueule d'amour,
Le Quai des brumes,
La Bête humaine,
Le Recif de corail,
Le Jour se lève and
Remorques - nine smasheroos in just
six years! So when Gabin signed up with Nicholas Farkas
everything was in place - the presence, the timing, the charisma - so
that all Farkas needed to do was to point at him, say
Go! and then capture his magic on
film.
For the record, the other two members of the trapeze act (les Trois
Maximes) were also major figures in French cinema: Fernand Gravey and
Annabella. The latter had of course played opposite Gabin in
La
Bandera and would arguably achieve her greatest presence in
Hôtel
du Nord (1938) though it was too bad that Arletty was in the
same movie and left her for dead.
This is a fine film and was deservedly popular at the time. It
would surely find an audience today if the CNC (France's national film
archive) would strike a few prints off the master in its vaults.
It was good enough for Herbert Wilcox to remake it in England the
following year as
The Three Maxims
starring his wife, Anna Neagle, with Leslie Banks and Tulio Carminati,
but this is not even worth discussing in the same breath as
Variétés.
© Leon Nock (London, England) 2010
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Film Synopsis
Georges, Jeanne and Pierre form a successful trapeze act, Les Trois
Maximes, for a provincial circus. Impressed by their talents, an
impresario books them for a season at a Parisian music hall. In
no time, the trio becomes one of the most popular attractions in the
capital, but their success may be short-lived. Georges is madly
in love with Jeanne and intends to marry her. Jeanne is
heart-broken when she hears of this, since Pierre is the man she
loves. Inevitably, Georges and Pierre fall out over Jeanne, but
will their rivalry end in public tragedy...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.