Film Review
One of the quirks of French cinema is how few films relating to the
Second World War were made in the decade that followed the
Liberation.
Apart from a handful of spy thrillers, such as
Maurice de Canonge's
Mission
spéciale (1946), French film directors tended to shy away
from war films, whilst Hollywood and Britain continued to churn them
out at a prodigious rate. The immense success of Alexander
Esway's
Le Bataillon du ciel
(1947) (which attracted an audience of 8.6 million in France)
challenges the assumption that French audiences had no stomach for war
films. The reality is that few film producers were prepared to
rake over their country's humiliating experiences during WWII.
The British and the Americans had something to celebrate - the French,
apparently, had not. The Occupation would cast a long shadow over
French culture in general, but its influence would be most apparent in
cinema, where it remained pretty well a taboo subject for over thirty
years.
Given their rarity, it is not surprising that those few war films that
were made in France in the immediate aftermath of WWII should receive a
great deal of interest. The one that drew most attention was
René Clément's remarkable debut feature,
La Bataille du rail, which
celebrated the contribution made by French rail workers in opposing the
Occupation. Clément had made a number of short films prior
to this (including several documentaries and the comedy short
Soigne
ton gauche which featured Jacques Tati) and would go
on to become France's most honoured filmmaker (winning two Academy
Awards, five major prizes at Cannes and two awards at Venice).
La Bataille du rail was a major
critical success that instantly established Clément's reputation
as a serious film director, winning him both the Best Director Award
and International Jury Prize at the first Cannes Film Festival in
1946.
What most sets
La Bataille du
rail apart from the majority of war films of its time is its
cinéma vérité
authenticity and complete lack of dramatic and stylistic
artifice. Somewhere between documentary and neo-realist drama,
crudely filmed on location with a cast made up of non-professional
actors, it conveys the heroism of its protagonists by convincing us of
their ordinariness - they are people just doing a job that had to be
done. The fact that Clément was able to work closely with
men and women who participated in the exploits shown in the film
ensured that it would provide one of the most vivid and accurate
accounts of the Second World War.
Whilst the first half of the film is constructed as a documentary, the
second half resembles a more conventional war film with its meticulous
depiction of an attempt to derail a German convoy. As spectacular
as this latter episode is, the most memorable sequence offered by the
film is the one where six railway workers are lined up and shot by a
German firing squad. This scene, filmed so intimately that you
cannot help feeling you are there, is given an intense, visceral impact
when the gunshots are masked by the sound of trains whistling defiantly
in the background, as though the trains themselves were infected with
the spirit of resistance.
© James Travers 2000
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Next René Clément film:
La Belle et la bête (1946)