Film Review
Victorien Sardou's 1881 celebrated stage play
Odette was the inspiration for this
absurdly overwrought melodrama, the only film which Robert-Paul Dagan
directed solo. Prior to this, Dagan had pursued a successful
career as a screenwriter and worked as an assistant Marcel L'Herbier
and Jean Dréville on several of their films, including
Le Président Haudecoeur (1940)
and
La Nuit fantastique (1942).
Clumsily appropriating some of the devices of American film noir (flashback,
slanted angles, high-contrast lighting, etc.), Dagan makes a determined
but ultimately doomed attempt to breathe life into a stillborn
narrative that isn't helped by the lacklustre performances from a cast
who appear bored with the whole thing (even Jules Berry looks as if he
is slumming it).
What is most objectionable about the film,
however, is its hideously bombastic score which drowns out large chunks
of the dialogue and serves only to distract the spectator from what is
happening on the screen. There are some inspired moments (such as
the eerie transition into the main flashback by the opening of a door)
but these are too few and far between to save the film. It is not
hard to see why Robert-Paul Dagan never directed a film again after
this. The title
Désarroi is grimly appropriate if
translated as
disarray.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Pierre, 20, is in love with Martine, and the two plan to marry as soon
as the latter has come of age. Pierre's mother, Madame Meillan,
becomes opposed to the marriage when she discovers that Martine's
mother is an adventurer who lives a dissolute life with her gambler
partner. Unable to break this news to his daughter, Martine's
father, Clermont-Latour, has led her to think that her mother is
dead. When Clermont-Latour's last attempt of buy off his former
wife fails, she returns, intent on revealing to Martine that she is
still very much alive...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.