Film Review
Jean-Pierre Melville waited 25 years to make
L'Armée des ombres (a.k.a.
Army of Shadows), his big budget
adaptation of Joseph Kessel's celebrated 1943 novel, which he
embellished with his own experiences as an active participant in the
French Resistance.
Prior to this, Melville had made two excellent
films set at the time of the Nazi occupation of France:
Le Silence de la Mer (1949) and
Léon Morin, prêtre
(1961). As great as these two films are, neither has the sense of
deep personal involvement that is so evident in
L'Armée des ombres,
Melville's most personal film and perhaps the one which best
illustrates his flawless mastery of the art of cinema.
L'Armée des ombres
combines Melville's interest in the Occupation with a deep
fascination for the dark and solitary world of the gangster. The
director had by this stage delivered four superlative gangster films -
Bob
le flambeur (1955),
Le Doulos (1962),
Le Deuxième souffle
(1966) and
Le Samouraï (1967) - each
offering a bleak and darkly melancholic portrait of gangsterism that
differed markedly from the familiar (utterly shallow) Hollywood
portrayal. It is no accident that Melville employs a similar
visual style on
L'Armée des
ombres to that which he had previously used on his gangster
films. The gangster and the committed resistance fighter have
much in common. Both live on a knife-edge, reliant on the loyalty
of others in whom they place their trust; both adhere to a sacred code
of honour which, if breached, invites a swift retribution; and both
find themselves excommunicated from our world, condemned to live in an
obscure shadow land, existing on borrowed time with few of the comforts
we take for granted. This is the world which Melville himself
inhabited as a lone maverick filmmaker, a solitary world of dogged
self-reliance and meticulous self-sufficient endeavour.
Perhaps what is most surprising about
L'Armée
des ombres is that the resistance members it presents us with
are virtually indistinguishable from the underworld operatives we see
in Melville's gangster films. Rather than glorifying their
exploits and depicting them as out-and-out heroes, Melville confers on
them something of the moral ambiguity of his gangster
protagonists. They are not heroes such as we tend to find in
conventional war films, but ordinary human beings who have, for good or
for ill, committed themselves to a cause from which there is no turning
back. Were it not for the historical context, the certainty that
the Resistance was on the side of the angels, working to destroy one of
the most evil regimes in history, it is doubtful that we would have
much sympathy for the résistants in Melville's film. What
is there to like about individuals who appear to have next to no regard
for their own lives and who cold-bloodily execute their own kind if the
need arises? If we engage with the film's protagonists it is in
spite of, rather than because of, what they do. We recognise
their humanity and admire their perseverance in the face of
overwhelming odds. We are moved by how they overcome fear and
somehow find the courage to continue with what must seem to be a futile
preoccupation. These are not cold killing machines, but ordinary
men and women who have taken on an extraordinary burden, to fight and
die so that the world might be rid of Fascism.
Here Melville adopts a cinematic style that is both striking in its
cold, austere beauty and perfectly aligned with its subject. The
whole film appears to have been shot through a blue filter, giving it
an oppressive, dreamlike texture with its restricted palette of greys and
muddy browns. As a result of this limited tonal variation,
there is an unremitting sense of
tension which is only periodically relived in sudden, short bursts of
activity. For the most part, the spectator is held in a state of
nervous anticipation, awaiting the cruel twists of fate that must
surely come. Yet it is often in these quiet lulls that the film
is at its most eloquent and shocking. The sequence in which
Gerbier and his cohorts have to execute a traitor is underplayed to
such an extent that it is a torture to watch it. There is no
music, no attempt to build up the drama. Just a slow,
matter-of-fact crawl towards the inevitable, the only sounds being
those made by the executioners as they go about their vile
business. The film's ending is played in a similar
understated manner, and is just as effective, more brutally so as it
dispatches, with cruel detachment, one of the most sympathetic
characters in the film.
For his most ambitious film, Melville is justified in assembling a cast
of exceptional calibre. The top-notch cast includes some very big name
actors - Lino Ventura, Paul Meurisse, Jean-Pierre Cassel and Simone
Signoret - who each turns in a performance of rare quality.
Ventura is particularly well chosen for the part of the Resistance
chief Gerbier and gives a far more nuanced performance than is evident
in his other tough guy roles. Far from being the implacable man
of steel, as he was too often cast in his career, Ventura gives a far
more subtle and convincing portrayal of hard man heroism. You
sense that Gerbier is a reluctant warrior, a man of intellect and
compassion who inwardly despises what he has to do, who has no desire
for personal glory, and who is motivated only by the impossible dream
of liberating his country from an evil scourge. Although they
play a comparatively smaller role in the drama, Meurisse, Cassel and
Signoret (an honourable roll call to which we should add Paul Crauchet,
Claude Mann and Christian Barbier) are no less impressive and offer
similarly moving portrayals of courage and endurance driven by bitter
necessity.
When
L'Armée des ombres
was first released in 1969, it was ill-received in France by both the
critics and the cinema-going public. The influential reviewers on
the
Cahiers du cinéma
allowed political bias to cloud their artistic judgement and they wrote
the film off as Gaullist propaganda. At the time, such a reaction
would have been the kiss of death for any film. De Gaulle's
presidency had recently ended in humiliating defeat in the wake of national strikes
and public demonstrations against his increasingly out-of-touch
government. The film was also unpopular because it dealt with a
period of French history which was still, 25 years after the
Liberation, pretty well a taboo subject. There had recently been
a few films made in France set during the Occupation - Gérard
Oury's
La Grande vadrouille (1966) and
René Clément's
Paris brûle-t-il? (1966),
both notable box office successes. However, these films (along
with Clément's supposedly authentic resistance piece
La Bataille du rail (1946))
tended to sidestep the grim reality of the Occupation and stuck to the De
Gaulle fiction that France had been a defiant nation of
résistants during the Second World War. (The truth
was that was the number of active Resistance members was more likely to be in the
hundreds rather than tens of thousands.)
L'Armée des ombres was one of the first French films that
dared to lift the thick veil that had for so long obscured the truth,
so it was perhaps inevitable that it would be widely reviled.
What the film did do, however, was to fracture the long-standing taboo
and pave the way for many more films about the Occupation, including
several which depicted France's shameful treatment of her Jewish
citizens, in such films as Joseph Losey's
Monsieur
Klein (1976). Following its restoration and re-release
in 2006,
L'Armée des ombres
was received in a far more favourable light than on its initial
release. Today, it is widely considered to be one of Melville's
greatest films (if not his greatest) and it deserves to be regarded as
one of the most important films on the activities of the French
Resistance. Whilst its depiction of physical violence is quite
tame for a wartime drama (certainly by today's standards),
there is a depth and gravity to
L'Armée des ombres
that makes it the most harrowing
example of French film noir, and possibly the most compelling.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jean-Pierre Melville film:
Le Cercle rouge (1970)