Film Review
The sublime belief in collective action through fraternal solidarity that
resulted in the election of the Front Populaire government in France in the
spring of 1936 is cruelly mocked in
La Belle équipe, a film
which, in its original form, is among Julien Duvivier's most sarcastic and
most frighteningly prescient.
Whereas the left-leaning Jean Renoir
threw his all in with the naive aspirations of the Front Populaire, to the
extent that his
Le
Crime de Monsieur Lange (1936) and
La Vie est à nous
(1936), both reek of Communist propaganda, Duvivier and his screenwriter
Charles Spaak were more sceptical and, as it turned out, far more realistic.
The film they envisaged bleakly anticipated the failure of the ragtag leftwing
coalition government, but unfortunately it was not the film that audiences
were allowed to see. The film's original downbeat ending was substituted
for a happier one that was more in keeping with the mood of the time.
It was almost as if no one (other than diehard cynics like Duvivier) dared
to imagine that the Utopian dream of a worker's paradise on Earth could ever
fail.
And so the version of
La Belle équipe that is now most widely
available is one that seems to come out in favour of the Front Populaire
ideal, cheerily conning us into believing that a shared dream can succeed
and overcome petty self-interest, random misfortune and even sexual rivalry.
Whilst not as drearily upbeat as Jean Boyer's
Prends la route (1936),
the film with its obviously fake ending cannot help feeling as contrived
and unconvincing as a government broadcast, which partly explains why it
is somewhat less well regarded than Duvivier's other important films of this
era. It is only the original version of the film that has any kind
of coherence, and even then it is beset with the melodramatic conventions
of the time, with the plot bearing a more than passing similarity with the
director's previous
La Bandera
(1935) - an impression that can only be reinforced by Jean Gabin's presence
in the lead role.
This was the third of six films by Duvivier in which Gabin played the central
character, following
Maria Chapdelaine
(1934) and
La Bandera (he also had a notable, atypical supporting
role in
Golgotha (1935)).
By this time, Gabin was strongly identified with the working class heroic
archetype that epitomised the noble proletariat, so who better to play the
lead in
La Belle équipe, a man whose blinkered idealism and
misguided faith in human nature mirrored perfectly those of the Popular Front
government? It starts out well enough, with five close male friends
willingly pooling their lottery winnings to form their own riverside collective,
but it isn't long before the delusions start to come unravelled, and when
slinky über-vamp Viviane Romance enters the frame and starts to drive
a mountain-sized wedge between buddies Gabin and Charles Vanel it's only
a matter of time before the whole stack of castles in the sky come tumbling
down. Or not as the case may be (depending which version of the film
you get to see).
The film's eminently hummable title ballad
Quand on s'promène au
bord de l'eau, sung by Gabin (a more than capable chansonnier), evokes
the spirit of the Front Populaire era so strongly that it might have been
its anthem. Not surprisingly, the song was a notable hit of the time
- more so than the film which, even with its crass, sanitised ending, failed
to enthuse the public. Despite being one of Julien Duvivier's major
films,
La Belle équipe has yet to be released on DVD.
The descendents of the film's director and screenwriter recently won a lawsuit
against the French distributor René Chateau which now forbids them
to exploit the film in the 'happy ending' version that Duvivier was
himself so strongly opposed to. If and when the film ever makes it
on to DVD it seems pretty likely that it will be the version that its authors
intended - a depressing modern fable in which a splendid dream is progressively
eroded and ultimately hacked to pieces by human frailty. Duvivier's moral
is that whilst solidarity is a noble thing that can achieve great things
in the short term (the Popular Front government lasted long enough to introduce
paid leave and the right to strike), in the end self-interest and stupidity
will always prevail over collective good will.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Julien Duvivier film:
Le Golem (1936)
Film Synopsis
France, 1936, Jean, Charles, Mario, Raymond and Jacques are five unemployed
friends who are desperately looking for work and live in a squalid Parisian
apartment block. They can still afford to buy the odd lottery ticket,
and it is with astonishment and jubilation that they react to the news that
they have just won 100 thousand francs. The temptation to go out and
spend their winnings at once is almost too strong to resist but instead the
friends decide to use the money to convert an abandoned washhouse into a
riverside café, thereby obtaining an income for life.
In a mood of carefree bonhomie, the five men throw themselves into their
business venture with unbridled enthusiasm but, through a series of unhappy
circumstances, their spirit of solidarity gradually fragments. Jacques
is secretly in love with Mario's fiancée. Rather than cause
trouble, he opts to walk away from the group and is seen no more. Mario,
a Spanish refugee who is in the country illegally, is soon taken away by
the police. Then there were three - and the worse blows are yet to
come.
Raymond, the most cheerful member of the gang, falls to his death on the
eve of the café's grand opening. This leaves Jean and Charles,
and they end up falling out when the latter's ex-wife Gina shows up unexpectedly
and demands her share of her husband's good fortune. Jean becomes so
infatuated with the seductive woman that his friendship with Charles is threatened.
It is just as likely that he will kill his rival as it is that he will patch
things up with him and make a success of their shared venture...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.