Film Review
Within five years of the first publication of James M. Cain's pulp
fiction crime novel
The Postman
Always Rings Twice, film directors were lining up on both sides
of the Atlantic to turn it
into a film. French director Pierre Chenal was the first to make
it to the starting block, although his adaptation, despite being the
first, is not well-known and is massively overshadowed by the
subsequent versions by Luchino Visconti and Tay Garnett, respectively
titled
Ossessione (1942) and
The Postman Always Rings Twice
(1946). In 1981, Bob Rafelson directed another notable American
version, starring Jack Nicholson and Jessica Lange. Although it
is overlooked, Chenal's adaptation is interesting if only as a prime
example of
French film noir and drives home the extent to which European cinema
influenced the American thriller genre in the 1940s.
Whilst it may lack the sordid earthiness of Visconti's film and the
simmering sensuality of Garnett's, Chenal's
Le Dernier tournant powerfully
evokes the gruelling bleakness of James M. Cain's classic
novel and the dark inner forces that propel the story to its shocking
denouement. It achieves this primarily through its distinctly
noir lighting
and camerawork, which clearly show the influence of German
expressionism (a feature also of Chenal's previous noir thriller
L'Alibi
and his superlative
Crime et châtiment), but also
through the intense performances from its lead
actors Fernand Gravey and Corinne Luchaire. Incredible to think that
Luchaire was just 18 when she starred in this film, and how tragic
that she would die ten years later from tuberculosis having made just
two further films. With her brooding persona and sultry beauty,
Luchaire appears to embody everyone's notion of the femme fatale, and
her on-screen
rapport with Gravey, who was at the time far better known for his much
lighter, comic
portrayals, is so intense, so tangible, that you might easily think
they were lovers off-screen as well as on.
Michel Simon, another actor better known for his comedic roles, is
surprisingly convincing as the third member of the ill-fated love
triangle, although his star status inevitably resulted in substantial
changes being made to
Cain's story to give him more screen time, at the risk of weakening the
dramatic thrust of the narrative. Charles Spaak's screenplay
is not much to write home about - it lacks polish and underscores some
of the flaws in the original
novel, although Chenal's skilful direction and the quality of the
acting easily make up for this. The budgetary and technical
constraints are painfully evident in a few scenes (nothing dates a film
of this era more than over-ambitious use of back projection) but
overall the film grips the attention and stands as a highly respectable
example of 1930s French film noir.
Le Dernier tournant deserves
to be better known than it is, although
its comparative obscurity is easily accounted for. In 1940, at
the start of Occupation, the film was banned by the Nazi censors
because its director happened to be a Jew. (Chenal fled to South
America in 1942 to
avoid being arrested by the Nazis, where he continued making films
until his return to France after the war). After the Liberation,
the film was again censured, this time because two members of its cast
had Nazi associations - Robert Le Vigan (who plays a small but
memorable part) had been branded a Nazi collaborator, whilst Luchaire
was the daughter of a high profile newspaper publisher who was executed
for his support of the Vichy régime. It was this double
whammy that led the film to be overlooked for many years, whilst
apparently vindicating James M. Cain's assertion that the postman always does ring
twice...
© James Travers 2012
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Next Pierre Chenal film:
La Foire aux chimères (1946)
Film Synopsis
Frank, a young drifter, arrives at a remote service station on a mountain road near to Marseille.
Here, the kindly old owner, Nick, offers him a job which he readily accepts. Frank is instantly
attracted to Nick's young wife, Cora, and it is not long before
they are pursuing a passionate affair. The two
lovers plan to kill Nick so that they can start a new life together.
Having made Nick's death look like an accident, they are acquitted of his murder.
However, fate has a cruel twist in store for them...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.