Film Review
After the fall of France to Nazi Germany in June 1940, Abel Gance
embarked on his most ambitious films of the decade, motivated by a
well-meaning desire to offer hope and encouragement to his nation at a
time of unremitting gloom. A pragmatist and patriot, Gance made
no secret of the fact that he admired Maréchal Pétain and
saw him as his country's saviour. It therefore comes as no
surprise to learn that Gance dedicated his next film,
Vénus aveugle (a.k.a.
Blind Venus), to Pétain,
whilst making it a pro-Pétainist allegory of the situation in
France, advocating not opposition to the Nazi Occupation but quiet
acceptance.
It is easy now to condemn Gance for his attentiste (wait-and-see)
stance towards the Occupation but it was a view shared by the majority
of the population and this may have been a crucial factor in the film's
success at the box office. Despite a crippling lack of resources,
Gance was determined to make a melodrama on a similar scale to those
that had first brought him renown in the 1920s. Unfortunately,
his artistic prowess was not what it had once been and his approach to
cinema (which was concerned far more with strong images than coherent
narrative) often resulted in films that looked as if they had been
conceived for the silent era and had been clumsily turned into sound
films.
Vénus aveugle
shows both of these failings and, ridiculously overlong and painfully
mawkish, it is among the least watchable of Gance's melodramas.
Indeed, the only thing it has going for it is a stunning performance
from Viviane Romance, then at the height of her powers.
With no other cast member having anything like her charisma, Romance
absolutely steals the film, and the sequence in which her character
loses her eyesight completely - one of the most poignant scenes in
Gance's oeuvre - is probably her greatest moment on film. Making
the film was not a pleasant experience for Romance, however. Not
long into the shoot, the actress had a violent falling out with the
director's wife, Sylvie Gance (here credited as Mary-Lou), who played
her disabled on-screen sister. Refusing to work with Madame
Gance, Romance insisted that all of her scenes be filmed separately,
with a stand-in - these were handled by Gance's assistant, Edmond T.
Gréville.
Whether it is the star actress's performance or Gréville's more
restrained direction, Viviane Romance's scenes certainly stand out from
an otherwise ponderous, turgid and excessively sentimental production,
just about salvaging a film that virtually deserves to be
forgotten. Apparently, the film was released in a shorter, 100
minute version, but was virtually incomprehensible. In its full,
140 minute form, the film is a chore to sit through but a riveting
central performance from one of the divas of 1940s French cinema just
about makes it tolerable (providing you consume enough caffeine
beforehand). Despite the immense success of
Vénus aveugle, Gance made
only one other film during the Occupation, the somewhat more endurable
Le Capitaine Fracasse
(1943).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Abel Gance film:
Le Capitaine Fracasse (1943)
Film Synopsis
Clarisse is an attractive young model who is in love with
Madère, a handsome sailor. When she learns that she is
losing her eyesight, she breaks off her relationship with Madère
and resumes her career as a cabaret singer to support herself and her
crippled sister Mireille whilst her lover goes off to sea. Not
long afterwards, Clarisse learns that she is pregnant. When
Madère returns a few years later, he is married to another woman
and has a young child. Clarisse's own daughter Violette dies
prematurely, just before she loses her eyesight completely...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.