Film Review
The last rites were being performed over the dying remnants of silent cinema
as director Julien Duvivier embarked on his last silent film, so it is highly
fitting that this film should serve as a lesson on the futility
of resistance in the face of unstoppable progress.
Although he already had twenty films under his belt, including the enchanting
Poil de carotte (1926),
Duvivier had yet to make his name as a filmmaker and it was only after he
had made the transition to sound that he would emerge as one of France's
leading film directors, the author of such enduring classics as
La Bandera (1935),
La Belle équipe (1936)
and
Pépé le Moko
(1937).
Au bonheur des dames deserves a place alongside these
other important works and is surely the highpoint of Duvivier's silent period,
a cinematic melting pot of 'borrowed' aesthetics (the influence of Abel Gance,
D.W. Griffith, Sergei Einsenstein and Fritz Lang is readily apparent) within
which the first traces of poetic realism and the author's trademark cynicism
are just discernible.
Au bonheur des dames is based on Émile Zola's novel of the
same title, the eleventh in his
Rougon-Macquart series, time-shifted
from the 1860s to the late 1920s. Zola's timeless tale of innocents
caught up in the tide of progress ensures that the film is as relevant today
as it was when it was made and, of all Duvivier's films, this is the one
that still feels frighteningly pertinent.
Unlike André Cayatte's
subsequent 1943 film adaptation,
which reads as a forced apology for Pétainism, Duvivier's film genuinely
does convey a sense of the hopelessness of trying to defy the ineluctable
march of progress. 'Change or die' is the film's sombre leitmotif,
palpably expressed by the contrasting fates of the two principal characters,
the shopkeeper Baudu who refuses to buckle to the inevitable and his more
pliable niece Denise, who is young enough to accept change as an unavoidable
part of life.
The film begins with a shot that is almost identical to that which opens
Jean Renoir's
La Bête humaine
(1938) (coincidentally another Zola adaptation) - an engine driver's view
of a train surging forwards on a set of railway tracks. In both films,
the opening serves as a stark metaphor for the powerful forces that will
guide the protagonists to their ultimate fate. In the case of Renoir's
film, the driving force is an hereditary illness; in Duvivier's film it is
something far less tangible but far more powerful - progress. What
progress is or where it comes from no one knows, but it is the thing
that propels humanity ever onwards, an unfaltering cosmic dynamo fuelled
(not controlled) by capitalism and the fruits of scientific endeavour.
The most striking manifestation of progress in Duvivier's film is the department
store of the film's title - a vast concrete and glass monolith that dwarfs the
dusty old little shops that surround it and threatens to swallow them up
and thereby increase its gargantuan bulk even further. Far from being
a static piece of decor, the store feels like a living entity, one that makes
captives of all who enter it (employees and customers alike), transforming
them into mindless automata that carry out its essential functions like corpuscles
in the human body. As the camera sweeps backwards and forwards in the
palatial interior (in reality the Galeries Lafayette, the world's most famous
department store), there is nothing to distinguish one individual human being
from another. Shot from high above, they become a seething mass of
animated flesh, like innumerable ants milling about their nest or a thick
carpet of maggots devouring a rotting carcass. There is no place for
individuality in this so-called 'temple of pleasure'. Like the subterranean
slaves in Fritz Lang's
Metropolis
(1927) and the silent production line workers in René Clair's
À nous la liberté
(1930), people become no more than mechanically animated cogs in one vast
machine, willing sacrifices to the Moloch of human advancement.
Those who resist the dehumanising effect of change, like the defiant draper Baudu,
have an even worse fate in store for them (forgive the
pun). They will be crushed under the wheels of the unstoppable locomotive
of progress. In the film's most striking sequence (an incredibly effective
use of Eisensteinian dialectic mointage), Baudu's last stand against those
who are determined to buy him out is dramatically inter-cut with shots of
a man demolishing an adjacent building with a pick. It is as if the
implacable storeowner is himself being demolished and you feel his rage and
distress every time the pick comes down, knocking another chunk out of his
marble-like resilience.
This stunning
coup de théâtre is followed by another,
as the old man goes totally berserk and makes a puny but terrifying assault
on the object of his loathing. It is as futile an act as a minnow attacking
an aircraft carrier but far from appearing feeble and pathetic Baudu acquires
a heroic nobility, and Duvivier's main achievement is to project onto the
screen the sheer naked fury of a man driven to the limits of despair by forces
he cannot hope to oppose. So richly expressive are the visuals that
you barely notice this is a silent film. Indeed there are scenes that
appear to scream with a piercing intensity. Denise's first reaction
to the sights and sounds of the big city is powerfully conveyed by some inspired
use of superimposition, fast cutting and camera motion, creating a dizzying
sense of euphoria tinged with mild panic.
Armand Bour's intensely involving portrayal of Baudu compels us to sympathise
with the doomed character - it is through his senses that the terrible destructive
power of change is experienced. A great actor of the French stage,
Bour was a comparative stranger to cinema but he had previously appeared
in two other notable films, both Zola adaptations: André Antoine's
La Terre (1921) and Marcel L'Herbier's
L'Argent (1928). The part
of the heroine Denise went to a comparative newcomer, the German actress
Dita Parlo, who would achieve considerable success both in France and her
own country - today she is best remembered for her starring roles in two
of the most iconic French films of the 1930s - Jean Vigo's
L'Atalante (1934) and Jean Renoir's
La Grande illusion (1937).
Octave Mouret, the arch-capitalist who is ultimately redeemed by the power
of love, is played by the debonair Pierre de Guingand, who was famous at
the time as the musketeer Aramis in Henri Diamant-Berger's
Les Trois Mousquetaires
(1921) and its sequel
Vingt ans après (1922). One other
familiar name on the credits is Christian-Jaque, here employed in the capacity
of set designer - he made his directing debut a couple of years afterwards
and soon became one of France's most prolific and commercially successful
film directors.
Had it found its way onto cinema screens just a year earlier,
Au bonheur
des dames would most likely have earned its director considerable prestige.
How ironic that the film's subject - progress - should have been its undoing.
Overly concerned with recouping their investment, the film's producers took
the fatal decision of delaying the film's release by several months to allow
time for synchronised sound to be added to a number of scenes. By the
time
Au bonheur des dames was released in 1930 silent cinema was dead
and half-way houses like this were readily passed over by a cinema-going
public that had already succumbed to the fad of sound cinema. Duvivier
was undeterred by this spectacular setback - he followed it with
David
Golder (1930), his first major success. Almost three decades on,
the director returned to Zola's world with
Pot-Bouille (1957) (a prequel
to the original
Au bonheur des dames) with Gérard Philipe playing
the younger Octave Mouret. This was to be the director's last big
commercial success as he himself succumbed to the inevitability of changing
tastes. Progress gets us all in the end.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Julien Duvivier film:
Les Cinq gentlemen maudits (1931)
Film Synopsis
After the death of her parents, Denise, a young woman from the country, arrives
in Paris to live with her uncle Baudu, the owner of a small draper's shop,
Le Vieil Elbeuf. Baudu's delight at being reunited with his
niece is tempered by his realisation that he cannot afford to keep her.
The opening of a massive department store
Au Bonheur des Dames across
the street is driving him to ruin and his income is barely adequate to keep
himself and his sick daughter Geneviève. Denise has the answer:
she will get herself a job with the rival store. Originally hired as
a model, Denise is on the point of being dismissed after an altercation with
another girl when the store's owner, Octave Mouret, intervenes and offers
her work on the perfumery counter. Mouret's motives are far from unselfish.
He is strongly attracted to the girl from the provinces and is determined
to add her to his list of acquisitions. Meanwhile, Mouret's plans for
expansion continue apace, helped by a wealthy investor. Only Baudu
stubbornly resists selling up but it is only a matter of time before he yields
to the inevitable, just as Denise will one day give in to the persistent
Mouret...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.