Film Review
After his celebrated
Marseille Trilogie, the best
known and most popular of Marcel Pagnol's films has to be
La Femme du boulanger, an engaging
modern fable which exemplifies not only its author's skill as a
filmmaker but also his extraordinary compassion for his fellow man,
together with a well-developed understanding of human nature.
The film was not only a major hit in France, it was also hugely popular in
the United States, one of the few French films to be both a critical
and commercial success in America in the 1930s. The film won the
New York City Critics Circle Award for the best foreign film in 1940
and Orson Welles was so impressed by the film that once he had seen it
he cited its star, Raimu, as the greatest actor in the world.
La Femme du boulanger offers a
portrait of Provençal life that is both ironic and affectionate,
humorous and poignant, and is easily one of Marcel Pagnol's most
accessible and rewarding films.
The story is taken from one of the anecdotes recounted by Jean Giono in
his 1932 novel
Jean le Bleu.
This is the last time Pagnol would take his inspiration from Giono;
previously he had adapted three of his novels for his film
Jofroi (1933),
Angèle
(1934) and
Regain (1937). Pagnol had
originally intended the part of the baker for the actor Marcel Maupi,
one of his regular troupe of performers.
It was Maupi who suggested that the role was ideal for Raimu, who had previously
triumphed in the stage and screen productions of Pagnol's
Marseille Trilogy. As the
baker whose world is turned inside out by his wife's infidelity, Raimu
turns in one of his greatest performances, one that nimbly wavers
between farce and pathos, conveying with a harrowing sense of reality
the abject desolation of a man who has lost everything.
For the part of the baker's wife, Pagnol considered hiring the American
actress Joan Crawford; he even took account of the fact that she could
speak no French by reducing her dialogue in his screenplay to the
absolute minimum. However, Raimu convinced the director that
Ginette Leclerc, then a comparatively unknown actress, would be a
better choice for the role. It was through this film that Leclerc
became a major star of French cinema in the late 1930s and early 1940s,
winning last fame for her portrayal of the sinister-looking
hypochondriac in Henri-Georges Clouzot's
Le
Corbeau (1943).
Other notable names in the cast list
include Pagnol regulars Charpin, perfectly chosen for the role of the
self-important marquis, and Édouard Delmont, who is hilarious as
the chatty fisherman who cannot recount a single incident of his day
without narrating his entire life story. Robert Bassac and Robert
Vattier form an amusing double act as the constantly bickering
schoolteacher and priest, the former clearly modelled on Pagnol's own
atheistic father.
In common with all of Marcel Pagnol's films,
La Femme du boulanger was
partially filmed on location in sunny Provence, something that gives it
a distinctive Provençal character that sets it apart from the
studio-bound productions being made in Paris at the time. The
exterior locations for the film were provided by Castelet, a small
village near to the Provençal town of Bandol, 30 km to the
southeast of Marseille, a region now internationally renowned for its
wines.
Not only does the location add to the film's charm and
realism, it also provides it with its best visual gag - the sequence in
which the schoolmaster is forced to give a piggyback ride to his
archenemy, the priest - the former is the only one who knows the safe
way across an area of marshland, the latter the only one who can
convince the baker's wife to return to her husband.
This seemingly innocent excursion into farce underscores the central moral
of the film: faith must always be tempered by realism, and vice
versa. Without the teacher's practical knowledge, the priest will
never be able to cross the marsh; and without the priest's faith in
human nature, the baker will surely have lost his wife forever.
Faith without reason makes a man a fool - as the baker demonstrates
with his blind faith in his wife - but reason without faith leaves us
completely without hope.
After WWII, Pagnol developed a stage play from his script for the film,
although he staged only one performance of the play. In 1985,
Jérôme Savary directed a theatrical production of the
play, with Michel Galabru in the role of the baker. Roger Hanin
took the principal role in a version of the play directed by Nicolas
Ribowski for French television in 1998. Galabru reprised the role
in a live broadcast of the play for French television in December 2010,
performed at the Théatre Hebertot in Paris and directed by Alain
Sachs. Bizarrely, given that it is one of the great classics of
French cinema, Pagnol's original film has yet to make it onto
DVD.
La Femme du boulanger
is a masterpiece waiting to be rediscovered.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Marcel Pagnol film:
Le Schpountz (1938)
Film Synopsis
The baker Aimable Castenet has recently settled into the small
Provençal village of Sainte Cécile and soon makes himself
popular with the locals with his delicious bread, the finest they have
ever tasted. For generations, the inhabitants of the little
village have been divided by petty squabbles, but they have no choice
but to set aside their differences when the baker's young wife
Aurélie elopes with Dominque, a handsome young shepherd.
Devastated by this betrayal, Aimable finds he is incapable of making
any bread and he is soon reduced to a drunken wreck of a man. His
customers cannot bear to see the baker in this state, nor can they bear
to go without their daily bread, so they agree to join forces in an
attempt to reunite the baker and his wife. Even the local
schoolteacher and country priest agree to call a truce, for the good of
the community, and the well-being of their stomachs. But where is
Aurélie, and can she ever be persuaded to return to her now
completely derelict husband?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.