Film Review
What is most interesting about
Abus
de confiance, a low-key drama which was the third of many
collaborations between director Henri Decoin and actress Danielle
Darrieux, is not its formulaic intrigue but its astonishingly frank
social commentary. Decoin's profound humanism and concern for his
fellow man shines through many of his films but rarely as brightly as
it does here, in one of his less well-known but most compassionate
studies in human frailty. The plight of young women in Depression
Era France (women who all too often were easy victims for exploitative
employers intent on extending their harems) is powerfully evoked in the
film's first half, whilst society's appalling treatment of juveniles
forced into a life of crime through lack of state provision and
parental support comes to the fore in the second half, ground that
Decoin would pointedly retread in his subsequent masterpiece
Les Inconnus dans la maison
(1942).
Abus de confiance feels far
less like a conventional 1930s melodrama and more like an early
experiment with social realism, and this is in part down to Danielle
Darrieux's presence in the feisty female lead role. The reason
why Darrieux became so phenomenally successful (by this time she had
starred in over 20 films and had only just turned 20) was that, despite
her glamorous looks, she had the 'common touch' - she was someone that
most ordinary women could easily identify with. Decoin exploited
this facet of his leading lady more successfully than any other film
director and in
Abus de confiance
Darrieux is as much a personification of the 'noble proletariat' as
Jean Gabin was in his films of this era (after WWII both actors would
look more at home in a comfortable bourgeois setting). Darrieux's
character also has an unmistakable feminist spark to her. Time
and again, she hits back against (male) sexual predators, and it's no
wonder she ends up a hardbitten man-hating miss who is driven to commit
a brazen act of fraud. How many other French films of the 1930s
can you cite that deal as honestly with the problems faced
by women in an overwhelmingly male-oriented society? (Women
didn't even get the vote in France until 1944).
Abus de confiance has another
claim to fame - it gave us that striking image of a young female
walking through the streets after dark in a beret and black vinyl rain
coat. A year on, Marcel Carné would 'borrow' the same
iconic look for
Le Quai des brumes (1938), with
Michèle Morgan forever immortalised in that most fetching of
1930s female garb. Simone Simon found herself in the same glad
rags in Jean Renoir
La Bête humaine (1938),
and she was by no means the last. It was Danielle Darrieux who
first burned this smouldering impression of female mystique onto
celluloid, and never has the actress looked more inscrutable nor more
stylish in the eye-catching montage sequence in which she contemplates
her dire situation whilst aimlessly pounding the streets of Paris, the
most alluring and mysterious of Gallic femme fatales.
Sequences such as this, so often imitated but rarely improved upon, owe
much to the keen visual sense of cinematographer Léonce-Henri
Burel. Burel first made an impact in the silent era, on such
visually extravagant works as Viktor Tourjansky's
Michel Strogoff (1926) and Abel
Gance's
Napoléon (1927), but he
is best known for his collaborations with Robert Bresson, most notably
Un condamné à mort s'est
échappé (1956). Not all of the films
that Burel lent his talents to were masterpieces but even comparatively
minor films such as
Abus de confiance
were greatly enhanced by his skill and artistry. Despite the
cloying dowdiness of its subject matter there is a modernity and
vitality to this film which owes as much to L.H. Burel as it does to
Decoin.
Unlike many of his contemporaries, Decoin embraced the opportunity to
use real locations and it is the abundance of vivid exterior sequences,
the most memorable of which is set in a lively fairground, that gives
the film its modern, near-documentary feel. A full two decades
before the Nouvelle vague crowd embarked on their trumped up cinematic
revolution Decoin was out on the streets of Paris, filming 'sur le
vif,' much like Godard, Truffaut and Rivette would do in their
heyday.
Abus de confiance
may be of its time but it is also, paradoxically, some years ahead of
its time, recording the social horrors of 1930s France whilst
anticipating some major developments in both society and cinema.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Henri Decoin film:
Retour à l'aube (1938)
Film Synopsis
Lydia is a promising law student who is struggling to get by after
her grandmother's death. She has barely enough money to buy
her evening meal and now, to cap it all, her landlord is
threatening to evict her! In a bid to raise the money
that will allow her to complete her studies, Lydia sets
about finding work, but in vain. Most of her potential
employers seem to be lechers who make a habit of exploiting
their female staff. Her only hope now is her best friend, Alice, who,
as luck would have it, has just come across some private correspondence
of the famous writer Jacques Ferny. It seems that, in his youth,
Ferny once had an affair with a young woman and that this resulted in
the birth of a little girl outside wedlock.
At Alice's insistence, Lydia calls on Ferny at his
home and tries to convince him that she is his illegitimate daughter.
It so happens that Ferny is desperate to have a daughter of his own,
so he is easily taken in by the innocent deception. Unfortunately, his wife
Hélène is not fooled so readily. She starts
making her own enquiries to confirm what she knows to be true: Lydia
is an impostor...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.