L'Homme de nulle part (1937)
Directed by Pierre Chenal

Comedy / Drama
aka: Man from Nowhere

Film Review

Abstract picture representing L'Homme de nulle part (1937)
L'Homme de nulle part is an engaging and idiosyncratic little film from one of the most underrated French filmmakers of the 1930s, Pierre Chenal.  It is based on a well-known novel by Luigi Pirandello, which had previously been adapted for cinema by Marcel L'Herbier as Feu Mathias Pascal (1926).  Two versions of the film were shot in parallel with the same technical crew: one in French, directed by Pierre Chenal, and another in Italian (Il fu Mattia Pascal) by Corrado d'Errico.

Pierre Chenal initially worked on the screenplay with Armand Salacrou, but the collaboration broke down when they failed to achieve the mood and style that the director had envisaged.  Chenal engaged the distinguished poet and playwright Roger Vitrac to complete the screenplay, which involved a revision of virtually all of the dialogue to lighten the tone of the film. The end result is effectively a Gallic version of H.G. Wells's The History of Mr Polly

An uneven narrative and some overly theatrical performances date the film somewhat, but overall this is a pleasing example of late 1930s French cinema, very different in tone to the burlesque comedies, grand historical epics and doom-laden poetic realist melodramas which dominate this era.  There are some inspired touches from Chenal and his cinematographer which effectively covey the central character's innermost feelings.

The sunny impressionistic opening makes a stark contrast with the grim sequence which follows where Mathias finds himself trapped in a bad marriage.  The film's impressive cast includes Pierre Blanchar as the idealistic butterfly-chasing hero Mathias, Ginette Leclerc as his morally dubious wife and a magnificent Robert Le Vigan as the deliciously villainous Count Papiano.  Whilst it may not be in the same league as L'Herbier's film, Chenal's adaptation of Pirandello's celebrated novel is a charming piece which feels strangely out of place amid the director's darker works of this era - Crime et chatîment (1935) and Le Dernier tournant (1939).
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Pierre Chenal film:
Le Dernier tournant (1939)

Film Synopsis

Mathias Pascal is a dreamer, a man of impulse and passion who makes an easy target for Cupid when the enchanting Romilda enters his world.  Believing Mathias to be a wealthy man, Romilda's shrewish mother Madame Pescatore does all she can to encourage a marriage.  When it latter transpires that Mathias has no money at all, his wife and stepmother make his life a misery.  After a short while away from his home village, Mathias returns to find that he is believed to have died.  Taking advantage of the situation, he decides to make a new start, and moves to Rome where, under the name Adrien Meis, he finds true love, and a dangerous rival...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Pierre Chenal
  • Script: Luigi Pirandello (play), Pierre Chenal, Christian Stengel, Armand Salacrou, Roger Vitrac (dialogue)
  • Cinematographer: Jean-Pierre Mundviller
  • Music: Jacques Ibert
  • Cast: Pierre Blanchar (Mathias Pascal), Isa Miranda (Louise Paléari), Catherine Fonteney (La veuve Pescatore), Ginette Leclerc (Romilda Pescatore Pascal), Maximilienne (Tante Scholastique), Palau (Le chevalier Titus), Marcel Vallée (Le maire), Charles Granval (Octavio Meis), Pierre Alcover (Malagna), Charlotte Barbier-Krauss (Angelica Bonafede Pascal), Jean Hébey (Pomino), René Génin (L'ivrogne), Georges Douking (Le domestique simplet de la pension), Marcel Lupovici (Béraldez), Gaston Dupray (Le directeur du journal), Robert Moor (Le fossoyeur), Léonce Corne (L'hôtelier du Luxor), Henri Giquel (Le docteur Basile), Charles Léger (Le bibliothécaire à la retraite), Yvonne Yma (Adèle Meis)
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 92 min
  • Aka: Man from Nowhere ; Feu Mathias Pascal ; The Late Mathias Pascal

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