Film Review
Darò un milione (a.k.a.
I'll Give a Million or
Je donnerais un million) was one of
a series of popular socially minded comedies that director Mario
Camerini made in collaboration with his lead actor Vittorio De Sica,
who was later to become a distinguished filmmaker in his own right and
a leading figure in the Italian neo-realist movement. Along with
Alessandro Blasetti, Camerini was the most important filmmaker in Italy
during the fascist period, and his films - mostly lighthearted,
non-political fare such as this - were hugely popular.
For
Darò un milione,
Camerini clearly takes his cue from René Clair's early comedies,
notably
Le Million (1931) - the story
is even set in France, presumably because no self-respecting Italian filmmaker would dare admit
to there being poor people in Italy under Signor Mussolini's nice new
regime. Vittorio De Sica turns in another slick, energetic
performance as the morally unimpeachable good guy, in a boisterous
fable whose messages are all too apparent but fun all the same.
This is the kind of film that Charlie Chaplin would have made a few
years earlier, one that condemns, in a humorous vein, the hypocrisies
of the middle classes and champions the virtues of the working poor,
here represented by a good-natured dog-tamer charmingly played by Assia
Noris.
Darò un milione
is not a particularly subtle or profound film, but it makes its point
effectively and is one of Camerini's most enjoyable films. It was
subsequently remade in Hollywood by Walter Lang as
I'll Give a Million (1938), with
Warner Baxter and Peter Lorre.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Monsieur Gold may be one of the wealthiest men in France, but he is
bored with life and decides to drown himself by jumping from his luxury
yacht. Before he can carry through his plan he feels impelled to
come to the aid of another man, a tramp named Blim who has just fallen
into the water to escape a ferocious stray dog. Tired of
parasites and lackeys, Gold tells Blim that he would give a million
francs to anyone who could do him a kindness without expecting anything
in return. After the two men have gone their separate ways, Blim
wastes no time telling the journalists about his meeting with Gold and
his strange proposition. Within no time, everyone in town is
showing kindnesses to the city's unwashed poor, hoping to cash in on
the one million franc reward. Meanwhile, Gold has met an
attractive young woman named Anna who works for a circus. In the
guise of a penniless vagrant, Gold joins the circus to be close to Anna...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.