Film Review
Even for those who are staunch admirers of the work of playwright and
filmmaker Sacha Guitry
Le Destin
fabuleux de Désirée Clary presents something of a
paradox, being one of his most inconsequential films and also one of
his most subversive. It was made in 1942 at the time of the Nazi
occupation of France and it represents Guitry's most blatant attempt to
defy German censorship and ridicule Nazi Germany. The film was
itself an act of defiance - to avoid being drafted in to make films for
the German-run company Continental, Guitry invented the fiction that he
was already contracted to another production company. Having told
the lie, Guitry was of course obliged to follow through and make the
film, for producer Edouard Harispuru. That film was
Le Destin fabuleux de
Désirée Clary, an irreverent historical romp in
the same vein as the director's earlier
Remontons les Champs-Élysées
(1938).
Even though Guitry went to great lengths to make the film appear
harmless (it is the most overtly vaudevillian of his historical films),
he ran into difficulties with the censors and it was only with the
backing of the Swedish royal family that he was able to get the
go-ahead for the film to be made. Even so, the film has an easily
detectable anti-German slant (evidenced by the far from flattering
portrayal of the Prussians) and, whilst it may be cloaked in flippancy,
its nationalistic pulse can be felt, as resilient as the undying
heartbeat in Marcel Carné's
Les Visiteurs du soir, released
just a few months later.
Sacha Guitry's allegiances during the occupation were ambiguous, to say
the least. Whilst some of his work during this period can be
interpreted as a gesture of defiance against the Nazis, there is also
plenty of evidence to show that Guitry was a staunch supporter of
Maréchal Pétain. His ambitious historical tome
De Jeanne d'Arc à Philippe
Pétain and its promotional film of the same title leaves
little doubt over Guitry's admiration for Pétain and his
political naivety. After the Liberation, Guitry was arrested and
thrown into prison for a period of sixty days for alleged
collaborationist activity. Even though he was later acquitted of
the charge of collaboration, Guitry's reputation would remain tainted
for the rest of his life and this is the main reason why he is far less
well regarded today in France than many other great French filmmakers.
Le Destin fabuleux de
Désirée Clary is in many respects a dry run for
Guitry's best known and most commercially successful film,
Napoléon
(1955). It adopts the two part structure of this later film,
representing the early and latter phases of Bonaparte's career, with
two different actors playing the young and old Napoléon.
Here, Guitry (with his characteristic modesty) takes on the role of the
older Napoléon, after Jean-Louis Barrault has graciously handed
over the part to him at the film's mid-point. The younger
Désirée Clary is played by Geneviève de
Séréville, Guitry's fourth wife, and the older
version is brought to life by Gaby Morlay, one of the biggest stars of
French cinema at the time, renowned for playing the female lead in
populist melodramas such as
Le Voile bleu (1942).
Whilst it is far less digestible than Guitry's subsequent gambols
through the pages of French history -
Si Versailles m'était conté
(1954),
Napoléon
(1955) and
Si Paris nous était conté
(1956) -
Le Destin fabuleux de
Désirée Clary impresses with its high production
standards and some completely unexpected bursts of whimsy.
Guitry's relentless voiceover narration does become monotonous after a
while but the abundance of acting talent on the screen makes up for
this (just). The film's most inspired touch is a short interlude
at the halfway stage, where Guitry abruptly breaks off the narrative
and, for no reason, starts to pay tribute to his cast and crew.
Having introduced us to the cinematographer, set designer, sound
engineer and other unsung heroes, Guitry promptly brings up the end
credits and leaves you wondering: (a) just where the film is going to
go next (a Terry Gilliam animation seeming the most likely bet), and
(b) whether its director has completely taken leave of his senses
and/or imbibed just one crate too many of absinthe.
Tragically, this lunatic post-modern digression ends before we properly
have time to digest it and it's back to the perfumed palaces of early
19th century France for a second helping of veiled Nazi bashing.
If Sacha Guitry had been able to sustain the eccentricity and shock
value of his mid-film excursion into madness,
Le Destin fabuleux de
Désirée Clary would doubtless be far better
remembered than it is. As it is, the film is little more than a
footnote in Guitry's illustrious career, its main claim to fame being
that it inspired the title of Jean-Pierre Jeunet's 2001 film,
Le Fabuleux destin d'Amélie Poulain.
If Guitry's film fails to satiate your interest in
Désirée Clary, you can always watch Henry Koster's
Désirée (1954), a
colourful adaptation of Annemarie Selinko's faux autobiography starring
Jean Simmons as Clary and Marlon Brando as - who else? -
Napoléon Bonaparte. Neither film succeeds in doing its
subject justice, but Guitry's at least has the virtue of not taking
itself too seriously. Gaby Morlay's reaction when she discovers
she is to become the Queen of Sweden is something to behold - you'd
think someone had just thrown her pet poodle into a pool of piranhas.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Sacha Guitry film:
La Malibran (1944)
Film Synopsis
When Désirée Clary was born, on 8 November 1777, no one
could imagine the fabulous future that was in store for her, least of
all her father, a wealthy Marseille merchant. She and her older
sister Julie were destined to be queens and earn their place in the
colourful fresco of French history. Désirée's story
begins in earnest when she falls in love with a handsome soldier named
Joseph Bonaparte. However, it is not Joseph who seeks
Désirée's hand in marriage, but his brother
Napoléon, an officer who has yet to make his name. As
Napoléon pledges his undying love to Désirée,
Joseph takes Julie as his wife. A short while later,
Napoléon breaks his engagement to Désirée so that
he can marry Joséphine de Beauharnais.
Désirée is understandably miffed by this rejection and,
in a fit of pique, she marries Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte, a prominent
military man who has recently fallen out with Napoléon.
Having conquered half of Europe and made himself Emperor of all he
surveys, Napoléon can at last show his magnanimity, by bestowing
on Bernadotte the title of Prince Royal of Sweden. As the present
King of Sweden is near his end, it will not be long before Bernadotte
succeeds to the throne and Désirée, to her undiluted
horror, realises she will become the Queen of Sweden!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.