Film Review
La Symphonie fantastique was the grandest of the thirty full-length
films produced by the German-run company Continental-Films at the time of
the Nazi occupation of France. The man appointed to run Continental,
Alfred Greven, took a special interest in the film and had a hand in the screenplay.
An accurate and authoritative account of
the life of Hector Berlioz the film is certainly not, despite its casual
plundering of the composer's
Mémoires. In common with
most self-respecting biopics about prominent artists, it is the
work
rather than the
man who is celebrated, and whilst it may fail to impress
as a serious piece of drama,
La Symphonie fantastique stands as a
fairly respectable tribute to one of France's great composers. A supremely
lavish production that revels in the superiority of French culture, it was
bound to appeal to a beleaguered French nation at a time of great anxiety
and uncertainty.
As you might expect for any film of importance bankrolled by the Nazis, this
gloriously self-indulgent biopic has a non-too subtle subtext, Greven's intention
presumably being to liken France, under the guiding hand of its enlightened
leader Maréchal Petain, to its subject. As in the case of Berlioz,
perseverance and constancy would inevitably prevail, overthrowing the stale
old order as the country took within her grasp the glory that was rightfully
hers. Unfortunately, some prominent Nazis (including Hitler's propaganda
minister Joseph Goebbels) saw the film differently - as a flagrant appeal
to French nationalism that might put fire in the belly of the resistance
movement. It's a curious dichotomy that is to be found in several of
the films made by Continental and if Greven had not himself invested so much
in it it's possible that
La Symphonie fantastique may have gone the
way of many other 'dangerous' films - all copies rounded up and thrown
into the nearest available incinerator.
Greven was the main driving force behind the film but the task of directing
it fell to 37-year-old Christian-Jaque, who had already notched up one notable
success for Continental with
L'Assassinat du père
Noël (1941), a Santa-themed whodunnit. Christian-Jaque
was an incredibly prolific filmmaker but his output was far from consistent
and the epithet 'auteur' is not one that slips easily into one's estimation
of his talents. What he did possess was a keen visual sense (which
first manifested itself when he worked as a poster designer in the 1920s)
and a natural flair for making polished films with immense popular appeal.
With the tremendous resources offered to him by Continental, Christian-Jaque
was at his most extravagant - only a handful of the hundred or so other films
he made (
Les Disparus
de Saint-Agil,
Boule de
suif,
Fanfan la Tulipe)
bear comparison with the films he made during the Occupation. With
is sumptuous set designs, beautifully lit compositions and grandiose camerawork,
La Symphonie fantastique revels in its confident majesty, its highpoint
being a wildly expressionistic visualisation of Berlioz's inner journey towards
the composition after which the film is titled. And then there are
the lavish set-pieces which culminate in an eye-popping staging of Berlioz's
Requiem within the Hôtel des Invalides - a suitably opulent
visual accompaniment to the composer's greatest musical creations.
No one would dispute that Jean-Louis Barrault was the obvious choice to play
Hector Berlioz, convincingly aging in the course of the film thanks to some
superb make-up work. Not only was Barrault one of the leading lights
of the French stage (and a very capable screen actor to boot), he also bore
an uncanny likeness to the composer - enough to convince you that he was
a near descendent. Barrault's one deficiency as a film actor was a
slight leaning towards the theatrical, and this is certainly noticeable
in
La Symphonie fantastique (helped by the mawkish and prosaic
script, which offers little by way of serious character development and psychological
depth). Fortunately, the brazenly operatic tone of the film proves
to be just the setting that Barrault needs to shine on camera.
Indeed, apart from his subsequent iconic portrayal of the mime artist Baptiste
Deburau in Marcel Carné's
Les Enfants du paradis
(1945), there is probably no other film in which the actor is so utterly
captivating. As his career progressed, Barrault would give better,
more subtle performances, one of the best being his arresting portrayal of
Henri Dunant (the founder of the Red Cross) in the far more sober biopic
D'homme à hommes
(1948), again directed by Christian-Jaque.
Given Barrault's professional standing at the time, it's hard to fathom why
he received third billing in the credits, following his two glamorous co-stars
Renée Saint-Cyr and Lise Delamare, who vividly portray the two loves
in Berlioz's life (or at least the highly romanticised version of the composer's
life conceived by its authors' fanciful imagination). As engaging
as Saint-Cyr and Delamare both are, neither makes anything like the impact
of the film's lead actor. Indeed some names even lower down in the
cast list leave a more memorable impression - Bertrand Blier as Berlioz's
eternally loyal friend, Noël Roquevert as a comedy policeman (apparently
a fugitive from an Offenbach operetta), Jules Berry as a reluctant sponsor
of the composer's work and Gilbert Gil as the tragically conflicted son.
None of the characters is particularly well-drawn - in fact, all are patently
crude amalgams or simplistic impressions of their real historical counterparts
- but this hardly matters. The most palatable biopics tend to be those
that turn a blind eye to factual accuracy and instead try to fashion some
kind of popular myth that shows us how things 'ought to have been', if only
there had there been more love and poetry in the world. As it
glibly adheres to this tried and tested formula, reducing the life of a great
artist to a slim scrapbook of fleeting melodramatic incidents,
La Symphonie
fantastique fastens on us the knowing wink of a brothel owner that promises
us what we would rather have - tawdry diversion in place of thorny enlightenment.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Christian-Jaque film:
Voyage sans espoir (1943)
Film Synopsis
In Paris circa 1825, Hector Berlioz is a reluctant medical student who shows
more interest in music than human anatomy. Convinced that his future
lies as a composer, the young Berlioz abandons his studies and devotes himself
to his musical compositions, encouraged by his friend Antoine Charbonnel.
The world, it seems, is not yet ready for Berlioz's new concept of musical
expression and it is only after long years of hardship and disappointment
that his efforts begin to bear fruit. Inspired by his nascent love
for the actress Harriett Smithson, he composes his
Symphonie Fantastique
but success still eludes him. Berlioz marries Harriett and she bears
him a son, Louis, before penury drives them apart. Scarred by life's
experiences, Berlioz ultimately triumphs over adversity. By the time
he has reached middle-age he is recognised the world over as one of the greatest
composers of his generation. As he resumes his love affair with Marie
Martin, a companion of his youth, Berlioz needs only one thing to be fully
happy - to be reconciled with his estranged son...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.