Film Review
In a year that saw the near-collapse of the Third French Republic through
a right-wing conspiracy after one of the greatest financial scandals in history,
René Clair certainly had no end of juicy material to get his satirical
teeth into. The Stavisky Affair that had resulted in public riots and
the resignation of Prime Minister Édouard Daladier was presumably
uppermost in Clair's mind as he embarked on his most scurrilous of political
satires in the spring of 1934,
Le Dernier milliardaire. The
other pressing concerns of the time were a stagnant economy caused by the
Great Depression, the rise of Fascism in France's European neighbours and
fears that the far-right may gain power in France on the back of the Stavisky
scandal. Not the happiest of times in France's history, but Clair's
philosophy was that where there's misery, there's mirth.
The idea that an incredibly wealthy businessman could
gain control of a country and, in a state of crazed delirium, impose a dictatorship
of the most ludicrous and divisive kind may seem like the stuff of far-fetched
fantasy (at least it did five days before I started writing this), but this
is the scenario that France narrowly escaped in the mid-1930s as a right-wing
alliance of the über-rich and über-bigoted sought to wrest power
from a weak left-leaning government. René Clair's fictional
Casinario, a bankrupt Ruritanian state on the Mediterranean (obviously Monaco),
wasn't so far removed from present day France, so you'd have thought the
film would have found a ready audience. In fact, the film was to prove
one of the director's biggest misfires. The French nation saw little
to laugh at in their prevailing woes and so
Le Dernier milliardaire
was judged tasteless and offensive. This failure prompted Clair to
leave his country and start making films in Britain and the United States.
He wouldn't return to France until 1946, to direct his first French film
in over a decade,
Le Silence
est d'or (1947).
Le Dernier milliardaire was not René Clair's first satirical
fling. His earlier film
À
nous la liberté (1931) was a full-on assault on modern capitalism,
scorning the pursuit of wealth for its own ends and the dehumanising effect
of mechanisation.
Le Dernier milliardaire may have the anarchic
feel of an early Marx Brothers film but it is just as scathing a piece of
social commentary, and the reason why it performed so badly at the French
box office is almost certainly because it was just too near the knuckle.
It was too easy to see how the absurdist nightmare that Clair's film
presented could become a terrifying reality - as it effectively did six years
later when France came under Nazi control, run by a puppet government that
shamelessly exploited the powers invested in it for its own evil anti-Semitic
ends.
Le Dernier milliardaire isn't as accomplished a work as
À
nous la liberté. Its dramatis personae consists entirely
of two-dimensional caricatures rather than believable individuals we can
identify with, and the humour is far more scattergun, relying too much on
slapstick and repeat gags to be as consistently funny and surprising as the
director's previous satire. Max Dearly is the film's trump card (the
pun is of course deliberate) - he absolutely steals the film with ease as
the billionaire businessman-turned-lunatic-dictator - his dramatic about-turns
(caused by bits of scenery dropping on his head) make Donald Trump look like
a model of iron-clad consistency. Renée Saint-Cyr makes her
mark at an early stage in her career, managing to be both funny and dazzlingly
eye-catching as the wayward daughter of Marthe Mellot, who gives an amusing
turn as the queen obsessed with saving her benighted land from financial
ruin / totalitarian control. (It takes a while for the well-meaning
mad old matriarch to realise it's an 'either-or'
option; you can't be both rich
and free).
Clair's over-developed penchant for visual comedy makes up for the general
silliness of the plot (which looks like something W.S. Gilbert may have come
up with in his later years). In a thriving casino, an obvious lack
of liquidity forces its habitués to literally bet their shirt, their
shoes and whatever else they happen to have on them at the roulette wheel.
When a suicidal gambler drops his gun on the table, his number comes up and
he wins a handful of firearms, so he now has the happy prospect of sharing
his suicide with his girlfriend (and presumably half a dozen depressed on-lookers).
A farmer pays for his dinner with one of his chickens, and gets an egg and
small chick back in change. The best gags are reserved for the part
of the film that shows us Banco's dictatorship being put into practice. It's
the funniest parody of a propaganda film you can imagine.
After an edict is passed outlawing their use, hats of all kind are rounded
up and thrown into the sea. People of all ages are forced to take a
break from their daily routine at set hours and perform exercises in public
spaces. Any person with a beard is required by law to wear short trousers,
and anyone who dares to speak is arrested as a dissenter and thrown into
prison. After this merry send-up of German-style Fascism, just about
everything that Clair's warped imagination then comes up with feels like
an anti-climax, but there are still plenty of laughs to come as an assassination
attempt is bungled and the odious Mr Banco gets his just deserts. You'd
almost think Clair hated bankers as much as he hated Fascists...
We all know that Chaplin 'stole'
À nous la liberté and
reworked it as
Modern Times,
but it's a fair speculation that he also saw
Le Dernier milliardaire
and took this as the inspiration for
The Great Dictator, a
film that has more satirical bite, and far more sustained humour, than Clair's
quaint whimsical offering. That said, there's no doubt that Clair's
film has a much greater resonance with the strange old world we have somehow
ended up with in the autumn of 2016. You might even call it prophetic...
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next René Clair film:
The Ghost Goes West (1935)
Film Synopsis
Casinario, a small principality on the Mediterranean coast, has run out of
money. The country's ruler, an ageing queen, sends out an urgent appeal
to Mr Banco, the wealthiest man in the world, to save her nation with a substantial
loan that he can easily afford. In return, Banco, a former native of
Casinario, will be allowed to marry the queen's incredibly beautiful daughter,
Princess Isabelle - which is unfortunate as Isabelle is already engaged to
another man, the conductor of the palace orchestra. Flattered, Banco gladly
agrees to the arrangement, but not long after his arrival in his home country
he receives a blow to the head that robs him of his mental faculties.
In a state of near imbecility, Banco assumes absolute control of Casinario
and immediately imposes a dictatorship whereby everyone is expected to obey
his every utterance or else be thrown into prison. Mistaking Banco's
raving insanity for political genius, the government immediately carries
out his wishes, which include forcing bearded men to wear short trousers
and making exercise in public places compulsory for everyone.
Hats, ties and chairs are outlawed - these have no place in a civilised society.
In next to no time, Casinario is once more a happy and prosperous nation. But
not everyone approves of the changes that Banco has brought about.
Realising her mistake, the old queen decides that it is better to be poor
and free than rich and enslaved. The last billionaire has had his fun,
but now he must die. Unfortunately, Fate has an even worse surprise
in store for him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.