Film Review
After Yves Robert's
La Guerre des boutons, the
second biggest home-produced hit at the French box office in 1962 was this period
action spectacular from director Jean Dréville on the life of
one of France's most important historical figures, the Marquis de La
Fayette. Dréville was not only acclaimed as a great
technician and auteur, he also had a knack for making films with
immense popular appeal. Before
La
Fayette, he had notched up several critical and commercial
successes, including
La Cage aux rossignols (1945),
Retour à la vie (1949) and
Les Casse-pieds (1948).
La Fayette was Dréville's
most ambitious film, an expensive Franco-Italian production that can
hold its own against any Hollywood period blockbuster of the
time. In France alone, the film drew an audience of 3.7 million,
in a year that was well-represented by lavish swashbucklers, including
Philippe de Broca's
Cartouche, André
Hunebelle's
Les Mystères de Paris
and Henri Decoin's
Le Masque de fer.
La Fayette epitomises the
French historical drama of the 1960s at its best, its only real let
down being a script that tries to cram far too much detail into too
small a space. Beautifully photographed by Roger Hubert and
Claude Renoir, the film is visually arresting throughout but only comes
into its own in the stunning battle scenes, which fill every last inch
of the widescreen picture and are breathtaking in their scale and
attention to detail. Michel Le Royer, a virtual unknown at the
time, was a daring choice for the lead role but he acquits himself
admirably and portrays La Fayette as history records him, an impetuous
firebrand and keen humanitarian devoted to the revolutionary
cause. After this impressive debut, it is surprising that Le
Royer's film career failed to take off; instead, the actor devoted
himself mainly to his stage work, with occasional appearances in film
and television.
Jack Hawkins provides plenty of old school acting muscle on the
opposing side, although his character, a cocksure old general who is
more preoccupied with his supply of brandy than winning the war, comes
across as even more fey and buffoonish than Albert Rémy's Louis
XVI. Orson Welles and Vittorio De Sica are shoehorned in,
doubtless to improve overseas sales of the film, but both turn in
enjoyable cameos, Welles looking particularly impressive as Benjamin
Franklin. Liselotte Pulver makes a delightful Marie-Antoinette,
narrowly eclipsing Pascale Audret in the thankless role of Mrs La
Fayette. Whilst it is hard to fault the acting, the areas where
the film particularly excels are its direction and
cinematography. Jean Dréville was 54 when he made this
film and would direct only two subsequent cinematic features before
ending his career in television, working on various series.
Educational and entertaining in equal measure,
La Fayette should be considered one
of Dréville's finest achievements.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Dréville film:
La Sentinelle endormie (1966)
Film Synopsis
In 1776, the British colonies in America have begun to rise up against
the British crown, intent on creating their own independent
republic. News of the revolution reaches the royal court of
France, and excites the imagination of one particular aristocrat and
solider, the 19-year-old Marquis Gilbert de La Fayette. A devotee
of the radical philosophy of Voltaire and Rousseau, La Fayette resigns
his commission in the royal army and plans to take a ship to the New
World so that he can fight alongside General Washington in the war
against the British. Naturally he faces opposition from his king,
Louis XVI, but with the help of Queen Marie-Antoinette and other
like-minded noblemen, La Fayette reaches the shores of New England in a
ship paid for out of his own pocket. To his surprise, the leaders
in the American Congress are apparently unwilling to accept the support
of the Frenchman and his comrades, until La Fayette convinces them of
his sincerity. On the battlefield, La Fayette proves himself a
worthy ally and makes an invaluable contribution to America's fight for
independence against the British...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.