Film Review
Coincidentally, 1933 saw the release of two very different films which
provided a scathing indictment of the French education system.
Jean Vigo's
Zéro de conduite (1933)
is the more interesting and most overtly critical of the two films, but
it had little chance to make an impact because it was banned
immediately after its premiere through fears that it might lead to an
outbreak of violence in schools.
Jean Benoît-Lévy's
La Maternelle (a.k.a.
Children of Montmartre), released a
few months later, was less controversial because it framed its
criticism within the constructs of a popular melodrama but it argues
the case for drastic reforms as eloquently as Vigo's film, by showing
that compassion and understanding are as important to a child's
education as rote learning and discipline.
Benoît-Lévy's film was the second - and easily the best -
of three adaptations of the 1904 novel of the same title by Léon
Frapié, which was awarded France's highest literary accolade,
the Prix Concourt. Previously, there had been a silent version by
Gaston Roudès, released in 1925, and Henri Diamant-Berger
directed a third version in 1949. Benoît-Lévy shares
the directing and writing credits with Marie Epstein (brother and frequent
collaborator of the avant-garde cineaste Jean Epstein), as
they did on a number of films. Benoît-Lévy was not only a
productive and very capable filmmaker, he was also a committed
pedagogue and made over three hundred short films with an educational
and public health remit. His interest in education and the
well-being of children is evident throughout
La Maternelle, which is his most
involving and humane film, the one for which he is remembered.
Whilst structurally it resembles a fairly conventional melodrama,
La Maternelle has several
characteristics that mark it out as a modern and subtly subversive film
for its time. The camera moves far more freely than in most early
sound films and this gives the film an energy and fluidity that
stresses the boisterous activity in the classroom. At no point
does the film feel cold and static - there is a constant impression of
movement, either physical motion or emotional development.
More importantly,
La Maternelle is
one of the earliest films to be centred around the psychology of the
child. Much of the film shows us the world from a child's
perspective, and the only adult character who seems capable of engaging
with children is a child-like Madeleine Renaud, whose subdued
performance is one of breathtaking humanity.
All of the other adults are seen as grotesques or caricatures - the
more senior attendant Madame Paulin (played by superb Mady Berry) who
delights in roasting the mice she catches; the school principal (a
delightfully fastidious Alice Tissot) who thinks it a cardinal sin that
a cleaning woman should have a college education; a visiting professor
who intends to force-feed the children the rabbit they have just
befriended; and the feared Dr Libois, who ends up inflicting the
cruellest blow of all by stealing Rose for himself. Notice how
large close-ups are used throughout the film to reveal to us the
children's emotional states whilst also emphasising how they regard the
adults - Rose is seen as a ministering angel, the others as cruel and
stupid ogres. As in Vigo's film,
La Maternelle forces us to see the
world through a child's eyes.
Marie Coeuret is the child character we most identify with - she soon
becomes the emotional heart of the film and the primary plot
driver. The film's authors - assisted by an astonishingly true to
life performance from a debutante Paulette Élambert - compel us
to see into Marie's soul and sympathise with her as one calamity after
another befalls her, leading ultimately to her suicide attempt at the
film's dramatic climax. Her contempt for her mother when she
allows a stranger to chat her up in a bar is as obvious as her
desperate need for affection, and when Rose enters her life, offering
the kind of love she has never known, we know that she is setting
herself up for an even greater fall. She becomes instantly
jealous of any affection that Rose offers the other children, and in
the exquisitely poignant scenes where Libois first proposes to Rose and
then is seen walking with her by the river the pain in Marie's heart is
writ large on her face.
La
Maternelle's obvious sentimentality has a cruel edge to it that
makes it a highly effective piece of social commentary. There was
probably no other film made in the 1930s that offers so powerful an
insight into the emotional needs of the child as this remarkable but
now sadly overlooked film.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After her father's bankruptcy Rose, an educated woman in her early
twenties, is abandoned by her fiancé and is forced to fall back
on her own resources. She ends up taking a job as an attendant in
a Montmartre nursery school which caters for 150 children of the area's
working poor. She soon gains the confidence of the children and
develops a particular fondness for a little girl named Marie.
When Marie's prostitute mother goes off with a man, Rose allows the
girl to stay with her, to the disapproval of the school's stern
supervisor. The latter finds she has an excuse to dispense with
Rose's services when it emerges that she has a college degree and is
therefore unfit to be a lowly school attendant. Dr Libois, the
school's inspector and physician, is so moved by Rose's compassion for
the children that he asks for her hand in marriage. Realising
that she is about to lose her one true friend, Marie is devastated and
decides to kill herself...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.