Film Review
The sudden arrival of synchronised sound recording in the late 1920s brought
about a cinematic revolution that posed insuperable challenges for established
filmmakers of the silent era whilst creating immense opportunities for the
New Turk experimentalists. Abel Gance and Marcel L'Herbier were two
avant-garde titans of French silent cinema who failed most spectacularly
to move with the times and embrace the innovation that had been thrust upon
them. Jean Renoir and René Clair were two comparable auteurs
who appreciated at once the creative possibilities that sound brought to
their art and made the transition so successfully that they grew in stature
and found international acclaim. Jean Grémillon was no less
a talent, but for him the crossover from silent to sound cinema proved to
be more of a stumbling block than a galvanising force. By the end of
the 1920s, Grémillon had made around twenty short films and two very
impressive silent features -
Maldone
(1928) and
Gardiens de phare
(1929). Although the rookie director's creative flair was recognised
at once by some (notably Jacques Feyder), his first two features had been
a commercial disappointment, so his career was literally in the balance as
he began work on his first sound film.
Fortunately for Grémillon, his promise had been appreciated by Charles
Spaak, a screenwriter of burgeoning renown, and Bernard Natan, the producer
who had recently acquired Pathé, France's largest film production
company. With Spaak's formidable screenwriting abilities and the resources
of Pathé-Natan to call upon, Grémillon's first sound film
La
Petite Lise stood a good chance of being a box office winner. Sadly,
this is not how things turned out.
La Petite Lise was such a
flop that it brought an immediate end to Grémillon's association with
Pathé-Natan, which was itself in massive financial difficulty in the
wake of the 1929 stock-market crash. With little prospect of future
backing in France, Grémillon was driven into exile, lending his talents
to mostly
mediocre fare at the Ufa studios
in Germany.
It wasn't until 1937 that Jean Grémillon had his first notable success
with
Gueule d'amour, the first
in a run of poetic realist masterpieces that earned him his reputation as
one of France's leading cineastes.
L'Étrange Monsieur
Victor (1938).
Remorques
(1941) and
Lumière d'été
(1942) represent Grémillon at the apex of his creative abilities,
but the prickly irony and haunting melancholia that characterise these masterworks
are just as palpably felt, perhaps even more so, in the director's first
sound film, a work that resounds with an abundance of human feeling despite
the abject simplicity of its story.
La Petite Lise begins, shockingly, with a harrowing depiction of life
in a densely populated prison in the French Guianan capital, Cayenne.
Grémillon's striving for slice-of-life authenticity - so evident in
his previous two features - is taken to its naturalistic extreme here, with
an opening that is far closer to hard-hitting fly-on-the-wall documentary
than traditional film drama. By the end of the second reel,
the stench of crushing oppression is so keenly felt that you are compelled
to sympathise with those condemned to this zombie-like mechanical existence
in France's toughest penal colony. As the camera pans slowly across
a packed dormitory, it is as hard to make out the individual prisoners as
it is to make sense of anything they say - all meaning is lost in a constant
hubbub of indecipherable sound. These lost souls make up a formless
mass of stinking human detritus, the spirit driven out of them by the inhumane
conditions of their incarceration. Then something remarkable happens.
A choir of prisoners begin to sing the popular lullaby
Ferme tes jolis
yeux and a strange sense of calm washes over the inmates, comforting
them, as they fall into a silent reverie. As soon as the singing ceases,
the lights go out and the prisoners are left to embrace the only freedom
that is left to them - in sleep.
After this startling introduction,
La Petite Lise continues on pretty
conventional lines, with a pedestrian melodrama that is painfully typical
of the era. Indeed, the plot is so contrived and simplistic that you
can't help wondering why a director of Grémillon's abilities would
have bothered with it. The hackneyed tale of a Parisian prostitute
who accidentally kills a pawnbroker whilst trying to rob him, with her (conveniently)
newly arrived daddy willing to take the wrap for the crime as a gesture of
paternal self-sacrifice... surely Grémillon was above such trashy
hokum? We could just as easily ask: how could a writer of Charles
Spaak's standing come up with such a pile of formulaic twaddle? Simple
though its plot is,
La Petite Lise is far from being a conventional
film. Indeed, it exhibits a degree of sound and pictorial experimentation
that is on a par with Jean Renoir's
La
Chienne (1931), arguably the most influential of the early sound
films made in Europe around this time. Grémillon's use of sound
is nothing less than inspired, streets ahead of anything offered by even
his most accomplished contemporaries, and yet his achievement was never recognised
at the time.
Throughout
La Petite Lise, sound is used not merely to reiterate what
is shown on the screen, but more often to create a jarringly different impression
between what we see and what we hear - a dissonance or disconnection between
the two senses. Sound is also used by itself - without any pictorial
support - to avoid the need to show us something that is likely to cause
a strong emotional reaction. A good example of the latter is the climactic
murder scene, in which the audience is denied the cheap thrill of seeing
a man having his head beaten in. Immediately after we see the heroine
Lise grab hold of a conveniently placed vase, the camera fixes on a window
for several seconds during which we hear the sound of breaking china.
After a further silent pause, with our gaze still fixed on the window, there
is another long static shot of the broken vase on the floor, along with a
dropped gun. An ominous pool of dark liquid slowly comes into view
and we know the worst. In a whole minute of virtually unbroken silence
only three words are spoken (by the boyfriend André) -
Tu l'as
tué (You killed him). The absence of sound - helped by the
fact that we see neither the murder nor the murdered man - gives this scene
an extraordinary dramatic power. Not even the famous shower scene in
Hitchcock's
Psycho (1960) conveys a
more palpable sense of the horror of the moment.
Another place where the parsimonious application of sound is used to great
effect is the earlier scene in which Lise and her father Victor are first
reunited after their decade-long separation. With the camera fixed
in a low position, we see Lisa apprehensively ascend the stairwell to her
room at the top right of the frame. As soon as the door closes behind
her, we hear her father's emotional greeting
'Lise, ma petite fille'.
Then there is a sharp cut to a shot of the window from outside the flat,
and we hear Lise's plaintive reply,
'Mon papa'. So vividly can
we imagine the warmth and poignancy of the long hoped for meeting from these
two simple suggestive shots that nothing further is gained by our seeing
it actually enacted on the screen. Grémillon achieves the maximum
effect by giving us the minimum of information and emotional stimulus - this
isn't just well-judged artistic economy, it is film art of an extraordinarily
high order.
The presence of the 'wrong' kind of sound is used to equally devastating
effect in the later scene in which Lise's makes her shock confession of murder
to her father. As Victor is left contemplating the grim ramifications
of his daughter's crime, all we can hear is an exuberant cacophony of dance
music from the floor beneath. The tragedy of the moment is amplified
a hundredfold by the obscene joviality of the music, and no words are needed
to express what is running through Victor's mind as he makes his decision
to take the blame for the killing. Here, Grémillon's use of
sound fulfils a similar function to dialectic montage in silent cinema -
with the power of the image magnified by a sound choice that appears to run
contrary to the intended mood.
There are other ways in which the director's mise-en-scène heightens
our involvement with the drama, and these include some obvious examples of
Brechtian distancing (a technique popular on stage at the time). One
of the most striking aspects of the film is the paucity of close-ups, one
of the most powerful devices in silent cinema. Grémillon uses
the close-up very sparingly, only when it is absolutely required, and his
deliberate avoidance of reverse shots is also quite noticeable. Most
scenes are staged and shot to resemble a theatrical production, with the
actors in mid-shot and the camera held static - often with one actor talking
with his or her back to the lens. The impression created is that the
spectator is actually present in the scene as a silent onlooker, complicit
in the drama but unable to act - like being tied to a chair in a gladiatorial
arena.
Grémillon's breathtaking artistry (on a par with that of
Yasujiro Ozu and Kenji Mizoguchi)
is sufficient to make
La Petite Lise a great technical accomplishment
for its time (few other directors overcame the immovability issue of the
early sound-recording cameras so imaginatively). But for the film to
deliver the emotional wallop it deserves it requires a principal cast
of exceptional calibre, and in this it certainly does not disappoint.
Most impressive is Pierre Alcover who, as Lise's father Victor, turns in
a performance of heartbreaking poignancy - the actor's screen-filling bulk
belied by the exquisite delicacy of his acting. It's a very different
set of emotions that Alcover arouses here from what he achieved in his previous
role as the ruthless speculator Saccard in Marcel L'Herbier's
L'Argent (1928). First as the
prisoner counting down the days to his release from prison at the start of
the film, then to his joyful reunion with his daughter after a decade apart,
Victor's tortured humanity is blisteringly apparent. When Lise confesses
her crime to him it is painfully obvious that he has only one course open
to him - to sacrifice himself to save the daughter he loves. Such is
the depth of compassion that Alcover conveys in these crucial scenes, with
the minimum of physical expressions, that we cannot help being moved to tears.
There is not a jot of forced pathos, no hint of phoney sentimentality, just
a genuine heartfelt engagement with the plight of one decent man honouring
his paternal duty.
In the title role, Nadia Sibirskaïa may not have quite the impact of
her co-star Pierre Alcover but she still has a gripping presence as the tragic
innocent driven to desperate situations by circumstances beyond her control
(a fate shared with the protagonists of many later Grémillon films).
Like Alcover, she is at her most powerful when she is robbed of the power
of speech and can only convey what needs to be said through the subtlest
of gestures. Lise's reaction to the realisation that she has killed
a man (albeit by mistake, and then only for the noblest of motives) is so
viscerally authentic that it slices into your gut like a fiercely lobbed
javelin. At the time, Sibirskaïa was married to Dimitri Kirsanoff,
one of the leading exponents of impressionism in French cinema, and she has
just as compelling a presence in his best films, including
Ménilmontant (1926),
Brumes d'automne (1929) and
Rapt (1934). Not only were Sibirskaïa's
features strikingly handsome, they were also remarkable expressive, and it's
fair to say that she acted mostly with her face - something that Grémillon
(like Kirsanoff) used to great effect to connect us with her character's
hyper-sensitive inner being.
Completing the impressive trio is Julien Bertheau, another prominent actor
of stage and screen with a magnetic personality that earned him a highly distinguished film
career. Today, Bertheau is best remembered for his many associations
with the iconoclastic director Luis Buñuel, which include such celebrated
works as
Le Charme
discret de la bourgeoisie (1972) and
Le Fantôme de la liberté
(1974).
La Petite Lise comes very early in the actor's screen
career but he acquits himself with a performance of great charm and subtlety.
His André has neither the abject fragility of Lise nor the supreme
nobility of her father Victor - in fact he is nothing more than a feeble
everyman with unrealistic life aims and a hopeless inability to carry anything
through. And yet Bertheau compels us to sympathise with him by constantly
stressing his devotion to Lise - his ardent desire to take her away from
her sordid life in Paris and his willingness to assume responsibility for
the murder of the greedy pawnbroker.
If
La Petite Lise had been made just a few years later, when the conventions
of sound cinema had become set in stone, it would have been just another
run-of-the-mill melodrama, a film of so little merit that it would deserve
its place in obscurity. The fact that Jean Grémillon made the
film when he did, just as the sound revolution was under way, meant that
it could be used to explore new possibilities for cinematic expression, and
this the director surely did, in spades.
La Petite Lise is a
bold masterpiece of cinematic experimentation and should have been the film
that made Grémillon's name, rather than the one that failed and sent
him into exile. It was only by pandering to popular tastes and accepting
the filmmaking conventions of his time that this incomparable auteur would
be able to make his mark on French cinema in the late 1930s, early 1940s
- such is the monstrously capricious nature of the Seventh Art.
© James Travers 2022
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