Film Review
Adapted from the popular 1929 novel of the same title by Eugène
Dabit (an emblematic figure in French proletarian literature),
Hôtel du Nord is the second,
and arguably bleakest, of the three poetic realist masterpieces
directed by Marcel Carné in the late 1930s.
Although it is
generally less well regarded than the other two films in the cycle -
Le
Quai des brumes (1938) and
Le
Jour se lève (1939) - it evokes more powerfully the
prevailing mood in France at the time: the disillusionment with the
failed Popular Front government and growing pessimism over the future
for a Europe that was drifting inexorably towards war. A sense of
despair and hopelessness hangs over the protagonists of this film and
we see what they see: a past strewn with broken dreams, a future devoid
of meaning and a present that is unbearable. The film's darkly
allegorical significance has an almost prescient dimension if we equate
Pierre's cowardly failure to conclude his suicide pact with France's
capitulation to Nazi Germany in 1940 and Renée's eagerness to
elope with Monsieur Edmond as France's submission to an occupying
power. The acts of cowardice and treachery that propel
Hôtel du Nord towards its
dramatic conclusion would be played out for real across France in the
years that followed, driving the country deeper into the abyss and
leaving scars that would rankle for at least a generation. It is
as if this film is a mirror in which we glimpse not only France's
present woes but also the misery and shame of its immediate
future. No wonder the film was banned during WWII.
What sets
Hôtel du Nord
apart from Carné's other poetic realist films is its profound
sense of cynicism. With its grotesquely sordid realism and almost
unremittingly bleak assessment of human nature, it has more in common
with Julien Duvivier's
Pépé le Moko
(1937), which is perhaps not surprising as these two films were
scripted by Henri Jeanson (Carné's usual writing partner,
Jacques Prévert, was otherwise engaged at the time). It is
not fate, a tragic conspiracy of circumstances, that determines the
outcome for the protagonists, but their own human failings. The
film's one tragically fated character is not taken by surprise when
death comes knocking on his door; rather, he embraces it as the only
way to escape his troubles, although the events that led to this are
the result of contemptible human frailty (Pierre's cowardice,
Renée's inconstancy and Raymonde's vindictiveness). The
poetic realist aesthetic has often been likened to classic American
film noir, but
Hôtel du Nord
is assuredly the one poetic realist French film for which the equation
is entirely justified. From the doom-laden opening to the
shocking cordite-scented climax, this is a film that perfectly captures
the style and ethos of film noir at its purest.
The central theme is one that will be familiar to any film noir
aficionado. As ever, the main characters are outsiders who are
desperately seeking escape from a troubled past. They become
caught up in a romantic entanglement which leads ineluctably to a
tragic outcome. Bizarrely, the film opens with what feels
like the classic ending to a film noir melodrama - a pair of lovers driven to
despair (by circumstances that are not yet apparent) check into a
grubby hotel with the intention of killing themselves. This
suicide is not the denouement however, but rather the overture to a far
more complex noir-flavoured saga of love, betrayal and death.
With much of the drama taking place at night, the visual noir motifs
are readily apparent, most notably the huge blocks of inky darkness that drape
the sets, a looming hungry emptiness that threatens to swallow up the
protagonists. Even for an era in
which French cinema was noted for its grimness (a stark contrast with
the Technicolor extravaganzas being blithely churned out in Hollywood),
this one feels particularly cruel and cheerless. You can easily
imagine the cinema usherette handing out suicide pills in the interval
instead of ice cream.
With its ambitious set designs and stellar cast,
Hôtel du Nord was one of
Marcel Carné's most prestigious films, and certainly one of his
most expensive. Central to the film is its setting, its titular
hotel situated on the banks of the Canal Saint-Martin in Paris.
As it was not possible to shoot the entire film at the real location,
set designer Alexandre Trauner was tasked with building a full-scale
replica at Billancourt studios. The set was the largest and most
elaborate that had ever been constructed for the studio and became a
tourist attraction in its own right. The enormity of the set
allowed for some strikingly fluid camerawork, which contributes a great
deal to the realism and oppressive mood of the film. Although the canal set is
convincing enough to be virtually indistinguishable from the real thing,
it has a subtly unreal organic quality, unnaturally idyllic during the daytime,
and threateningly claustrophobic during the night. In the
nocturnal sequences, helped by Maurice Jaubert's demonically eerie score,
the set acquires a malevolent aspect and resembles a monstrous trap.
There is something deeply unsettling in the way that the set, a static construction,
so vividly reflects the complex dual nature of the main protagonists.
Whilst
Hôtel du Nord
impresses with its mise-en-scène, writing and design, the one
area where it particularly excels is the acting, a testament to
the quality of the cast that Carné was able to
assemble. As the upwardly mobile pimp and gutter whore with a
grudge, Louis Jouvet and Arletty form one of French cinema's most
iconic pairings, their darkly comedic tussles providing the film with
its few moments of light relief. "Atmosphère!
Atmosphère! Est-ce que j'ai une gueule
d'Atmosphère?" squawks Arletty, rebuffing Jouvet's macho
insensitivity with possibly the most famous line in French
cinema. Jouvet had previously worked with Carné on the
black comic masterpiece
Drôle de drame (1936);
Arletty would feature prominently in four of Carné's
subsequent films:
Le
Jour se lève (1939),
Les Visiteurs du soir (1942),
Les Enfants du paradis (1945) (her
most memorable role) and
L'Air de Paris (1954).
The film's romantic leads are played by Annabella and
Jean-Pierre Aumont, who had previously been cast as the star-crossed
lovers in Anatole Litvak's classy WWI melodrama
L'Équipage
(1935). Although Aumont is sidelined for much of the film, his
performance is the most creditable, outshining even Annabella and
Jouvet with his highly poignant portrayal of a wreck of a man who is
overwhelmed by his own sense of failure.
The supporting cast is also pretty distinguished, including such
familiar character performers as Jane Marken, Paulette Dubost and Andrex. Any
self-respecting French film
enthusiast will have no difficulty recognising the magnificent Bernard
Blier (despite the full head of hair) in one of his earliest film roles
- here, as he salivates over Arletty, he looks creepily like a half-starved wolf contemplating
a succulent little poodle. Making his screen debut is a
young François Périer, who would soon go on to become one
of France's most acclaimed actors of the stage and screen.
With such a bevy of high class acting talent, directed with unwavering
panache by one of France's greatest film auteurs, how could
Hôtel du Nord fail to be one
of the all-time classics of French cinema? Not only is this a
great film, a powerful study in inadequacy and
failure, it also offers a fascinating, indeed harrowing, insight
into the state of mind of the French nation in the late 1930s, giving some
clue as to why the wartime years that followed would prove to be so
traumatic. If you lose faith in yourself, what is there to hope
for? The Hôtel du Nord is the place that we most fear ending up
at.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Marcel Carné film:
Le Quai des brumes (1938)
Film Synopsis
One evening, two young lovers, Renée and Pierre, check into the
Hôtel du Nord in Paris, near to the Canal Saint-Martin.
Unable to find work and haunted by their past, they have made up their
minds to commit suicide together, hoping to be reunited in
Paradise. But at the fatal moment, Pierre cannot bring himself to
turn the gun on himself, so having wounded Renée, he flees in a
panic. The gunshot is overheard by Monsieur Edmond, a pimp who
lives in an adjacent room with his prostitute Raymonde. It is
Edmond who saves Renée by rushing her to hospital, where she
makes a miraculous recovery. Renée later returns to the
scene of the drama and persuades the hotel proprietor to give her a
job. By this time, Pierre has handed himself over to the police
and is languishing in prison. When Renée visits him, he
callously rebukes her and tells her she should forget him, something
that Renée feels unable to do. One man who might offer
Renée a fresh start is Edmond, who finds himself drawn to
her. When he learns that some old enemies are in the
neighbourhood and intent on revenge, Edmond decides to go far away
and begin a new life with Renée. Alas, Renée can
think only of Pierre...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.