Film Review
In the last week of October 1946, French cinema audiences were treated
to not one but two film renditions of the classic
Beauty and the Beast tale, the
first a traditional period fantasy interpretation by Jean Cocteau (
La Belle et la bête), the
second a darkly pessimistic film noir melodrama with a contemporary
setting, entitled
La Foire aux
chimères and directed by Pierre Chenal. Whilst
Cocteau's film has endured and now rates as an undisputed classic of
French cinema, Chenal's has been virtually forgotten, and yet the two
films complement one another perfectly and together they give an
insight into the mood in France in the austere aftermath of WWII.
The Beast was certainly an apt metaphor for a nation that, shamed by
the years of Occupation, was in danger of withdrawing into self-pitying
retreat from a scornful and unforgiving world.
La Foire aux chimères
is the most perfectly constructed, and also the most atmospheric, of
the half a dozen or so films noirs that Pierre Chenal put his name to
in the 1930s and 40s, all imbued with the poetic realist style that was
popular in France at the time. Before the film noir thriller had
become a staple of American cinema, Chenal had already helmed two
impressive examples of the genre,
L'Alibi (1937) and
Le Dernier Tournant (1939), the
latter being cinema's first adaptation of James M. Cain's famous crime
novel
The Postman Always Rings Twice.
L'Alibi featured the great
Austrian actor-director Erich von Stroheim in one of his earliest
French film roles and, on his return to France after a brief stint in
Hollywood, the actor was easily persuaded to take the lead in
La Foire aux chimères, in a
role that might have been tailor-made for him.
Whereas Jean Marais's Beast in Cocteau's film has the slight misfortune
of being likeably cute, von Stroheim's reclusive fiend in Chenal's film
is positively terrifying (and with far less make-up). With his
stern, forbidding features and stiff, military bearing (to say nothing
of his creepy diction), Erich von Stroheim was perfectly suited for
villainous roles, but few (if any) of the characters he played were
outright villains. As the disfigured banknote printer in
La Foire aux chimères, he is
a wonderfully contradictory character, his sinister and threatening
exterior distracting us from the essentially good man that lies
within. In some scenes, harshly lit from the side or rear (as
villains invariably are in films noirs), von Stroheim looks like
something out of an expressionistic German horror film, filling the
screen with menace and murderous intent. And yet, at the same
time, the actor compels us to sympathise with his character, to see
that his actions are motivated not by greed or malice but by an
overriding desire to buy acceptance in a society from which he feels
permanently excluded. Like all good monsters, von Stroheim just
wants to be loved.
As the Beauty to von Stroheim's Beast, Madeleine Sologne is admirably
served by a character that is every bit as ambiguous and surprising as
her co-star's. Playing the blind but stunningly beautiful siren
Jeanne, Sologne ought to be von Stroheim's redeemer, but in Chenal's
wickedly inverted version of the classic fairytale, she becomes his
destroyer, the innocent charmer who unwittingly converts a decent man
into a coldly calculating crook. Sologne wears the mantle of
femme fatale with elegant ease when, her sight restored, she rejects
von Stroheim in favour of a far more prepossessing example of manhood,
albeit one who makes his living by throwing knives at her. Von
Stroheim and Sologne are flawed characters who, ill-used by fate, must
negotiate a perilous course to damnation or redemption. By contrast,
Louis Salou's single-minded blackmailer is as one dimensional a villain
as they come - a louche, Mephistophelian figure in the background who
becomes the instrument of Von Stroheim's destruction and Sologne's
release.
The film's hysterical climax anticipates Carol Reed's
The
Third Man (1949),with boldly expressionistic lighting and
camerawork used to dazzling effect to exteriorise von Stroheim's mental
collapse as fear and desperation take him over and propel him to his
doom. When he treads the steps down into a seedy nightclub it is
as if he is knowingly descending into Hell, and amid a frenzy of
oblique camera angles we see him transformed into a murderous fiend
intent on wreaking havoc on a world that has alienated and spurned him
for too long. What begins as an eerily baroque fairytale suffused
with hope and poetry ends as a desperately grim expressionistic
tragedy, and the final shot of Sologne revelling in her newfound
freedom offers precious little comfort after the nightmarish episode
that precedes it. This is as noir as it gets - Pierre Chenal's
one great masterpiece.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Pierre Chenal film:
Clochemerle (1948)
Film Synopsis
Frank Davis is the unimpeachable director of a company that prints what
he claims to be unforgeable banknotes. In his fifties, he is an
object of ridicule on account of the facial disfigurement he acquired
in an accident. One evening, he is passing through a busy
fairground when he notices an angelic young woman named Jeanne coming his way.
Being blind, the woman cannot see Frank's facial scar and she strikes
up an immediate friendship with him. She gives up her life as an
assistant to a knife-thrower and becomes Frank's wife. Frank
gives Jeanne every comfort she could ask for, but in doing so he ruins
himself and he ends up having to pass off forged banknotes to keep up
his extravagant lifestyle. When Furet, the manager of a gambling
joint frequented by Frank, discovers this he blackmails Frank into
forging banknotes for him. Meanwhile, Jeanne has regained her
sight through an operation and, having seen her husband's face, she is
ready to return to her former lover...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.