Film Review
It was in June 1938 that the veteran director Jacques de Baroncelli
began work on what was to be one of his most ambitious films, a lavish
screen version of Jules Romains' French translation of Stefan Zweig's
1928 German language stage play
Volpone.
The latter was itself an adaptation of an earlier work, a play of the
same name by the English playwright Ben Jonson, first performed in
1606. Baroncelli overstretched himself financially (ironically,
given how the play starts...) and was soon forced to abandon the
production. Three years later, it was picked up by another film
director, Maurice Tourneur, who managed to complete it for the company
Île de France Film, with most of the cast of the original
shoot. Although some of the scenes directed by Baroncelli made it
into the final film, Tourneur received the sole director's
credit. Another notable omission from the credits is Zweig's name
- with France under Nazi Occupation, the Jewish writer was conveniently
airbrushed out of the picture.
With handsome production values and a cast comprising some of the
finest stage and screen actors of the period, Tourneur's film more than
does justice to the original play and ought to be considered a comic
masterpiece, French cinema's most deliciously acerbic satire on the
deadly sin of greed. Harry Baur positively revels in the title
role and extracts as much comedy mileage from the part as he can, aided
by a hideous make-up job that makes him look like Bette Davis's ugly
older sister after one vodka martini too many. As befits an
actor of his standing, Baur doesn't just go for the laughs, he also
delivers a nuanced character performance which makes his Volpone a
well-rounded and tragically believable individual.
Louis Jouvet has just as much fun as the cunning Mosca, revealing his
mischievous intent to us whilst at the same time pulling the wool over
everyone else who is blind to all but the lure of wealth. Charles
Dullin, another legend of the French stage, comes dangerously close to
stealing the film as the grotesque moneylender Corbaccio, the most
enjoyably eccentric of his all too few film appearances. À
propos, it was Dullin who first staged the Romains-Zweig play in Paris
in 1928. Fernand Ledoux, Jacqueline Delubac and Alexandre
Rignault add further lustre to a remarkable ensemble, although it has
to be said that the combined presence of Baur, Jouvet and Dullin, a
lethal combination if ever there was one, render them virtually
invisible for much of the film.
Maurice Tourneur may have been in his late sixties when he directed
this film but his workmanship is as impeccable as ever. Whilst he
remains faithful to the original stage play, he brings to it a pace and
dynamism that no theatrical production could hope to match, to say
nothing of the striking visuals (which make the filmed inserts of
Venice totally superfluous). It is worth reminding ourselves that
Ben Jonson's play was not written for a posturing intellectual elite
but for the throng of ordinary humanity, and Tourneur's film has just
this quality of popular appeal, making it the most vibrant and engaging
reinterpretation of a Jacobean play a mainstream cinema audience could
hope for. The sets are as grand and ornate as you would expect
for a big budget period production of this era, and the costumes are
even more extravagant than the performances (all humorously evoking the
animal characteristics of the protagonists). A lively farce with
a cogent moral (which remains relevant to this day)
Volpone was just the tonic for a
conquered nation, and it remains one of the most hysterically funny
films in French cinema. Comedies seldom come much classier than
this.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Maurice Tourneur film:
La Main du diable (1943)
Film Synopsis
Volpone is one of the wealthiest merchants in Venice, but when his
ships laden with cargo fail to arrive on time he faces an ignoble
ruin. Spurned by his creditors, he is thrown into prison, and it
is here that he meets Mosca, a man he believes he can trust. Once
his ships have returned, Volpone is released from prison and sets about
taking revenge on the three men who failed to help him in his hour of
need: Corbaccio, Voltore and Corvino. Following the advice of
Mosca, his servant and closest confidante, Volpone takes to his bed and
lets it be known that he is close to death. When Mosca hints that
they each stand a chance of inheriting the merchant's entire fortune,
Corbaccio, Voltore and Corvino hasten to his bedside, offering gifts as
a sign of their devotion. Corbaccio even agrees to disinherit his
own son in Volpone's favour, so certain is he that he will outlive the
dying merchant...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.