Film Review
As he neared the end of his prolific career as a writer and director, Sacha Guitry expressed,
through his work, an increasing sense of pessimism and disillusionment with the world,
particularly the self-satisfied bourgeois milieu that he inhabited. Nowhere is this
more apparent than in
La Vie d'un honnête homme
, a dark moralist work - albeit one with some brilliant comic touches - which reflects
what Guitry saw as an increasingly hypocritical, soulless and unjust world. What
is perhaps surprising is that the film's author offers no easy solution - you either
live with the system or you disappear into obscurity. There can be no happy ending
in such a cosmos as this.
Guitry's barely contained venom is directed principally at the bourgeoisie, whose
behaviours (habitual deceit, manipulation and selfishness) reveal a sickening moral vacuity
- in which Guitry presumably feels he is in part complicit. The film may not
be Guitry's greatest technical achievement, but it is certainly among his most enjoyable
and thought-provoking works. There are some memorable jokes, but the comedy does
not detract from the seriousness of the underlying point that Guitry is making, namely
that middle class society stinks.
As ever, Sacha Guitry is well served by his
technical crew and cast. Jean Bachelet's moody photography is redolent of the poetic
realist style of the 1930s and makes a welcome change from the bland, characterless look
that most French films of the 1950s had. Michel Simon is remarkable in the double
role of the two twin brothers - his skill in delineating the two characters showing what
an extraordinarily talented actor he was. Much of the impact of this film stems
from the pathos and humanity that Simon brings to his performance. Hanging onto
Simon's coat tails you can hardly fail to notice another actor with talent - Louis de
Funès in one of his early roles (and with a full head of hair), many years before
he became the most popular comic actor in France. The icing on this particular
gâteau is the nocturnal serenade sung by Marcel Mouloudji (an actor who became a
popular singer in France) - sequences that add an exquisite touch of poetry to what is
assuredly one of Sacha Guitry's best films.
© James Travers 2007
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Next Sacha Guitry film:
Si Versailles m'était conté (1954)
Film Synopsis
Through a combination of hard work and ruthlessness, Albert Ménard-Lacoste has
become a wealthy businessman, although his austerity prevents him from being loved, even
by his family. One day, he is confronted by his worst nightmare in the form
of his estranged brother Alain, who is his polar opposite - an easy-going, penniless drifter.
Albert's first reaction is to dismiss Alain from his sight. But then he has a change
of heart and drops in on the shabby lodgings where Alain is living. Albert is about
to offer his brother a job when the latter suffers a fatal heart-attack. Immediately,
the cunning businessman sees a way to make a fresh start and perhaps settle a few scores
with his family. He swaps his clothes with Alain and assumes the dead man's identity.
Little by little, Albert's eyes are opened to the shallowness of his erstwhile life and
to the grotesque hypocrisies of his everyday existence…
© James Travers
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