Film Review
The name Talleyrand may not be as widely known as that of Bonaparte
but, of the many great men who participated in the French Revolution
(and its aftermath) few had as great an impact as the Prince de
Talleyrand. Historical figures generally divide into two
categories, the breakers and the makers - those who smash things up
like spoiled two-year-olds and those who try to put things back
together again. We find it easier to remember those in the first
camp and overlook those in the other, even though the latter have
arguably had a much greater impact in shaping modern
civilisation. Talleyrand was one of the makers, a uniquely gifted
diplomat who, equipped with a remarkable skill for self-preservation,
served under no less than six régimes, not only oiling the
wheels of the French Revolution and reining in Napoléon's insane
ambitions, but also restoring the French monarchy and securing that
elusive goal of a lasting peace with Great Britain (no mean feat, as
France and Britain had been at war, on and off, for the past seven
hundred years). Talleyrand also has the distinction of being
France's first Prime Minister, although he only occupied the post for
three months in 1815.
Yet whilst no one disputes Talleyrand's achievements, historians remain
divided over whether he was motivated by noble aims, working for the
greater glory of France, or merely a shameless political opportunist,
ready to switch allegiances at the drop of a tricorn for his own
survival and so he could slake his insatiable thirst for women, wealth
and power. Talleyrand's eagerness to renounce Napoléon and
throw his lot in with the Bourbons in 1814 is regarded by some as an
act of treason, although it is worth noting that Talleyrand was hardly
the most devoted follower of Napoléon and would often go behind
his back to undo what he considered to be ruinous acts of folly.
Today, Napoléon is regarded as a national hero in France, a
symbol of French nationalism; Talleyrand is less well-known, even
though he perhaps has a much greater claim to be seen as the saviour of
France in the 19th century and the founder of the modern French state.
In his 1948 film
Le Diable boiteux,
Sacha Guitry leaves us in no doubt as to what he thinks of Talleyrand -
an unjustly maligned genius of statecraft who steered France through
its most turbulent period without securing for himself the recognition
he deserved for his achievements. Guitry's Talleyrand is hardly a
model of virtue - he is manipulative, greedy for power, and as
susceptible to the pleasures of the flesh as any of us. In one
memorable exchange, Napoléon calls him "a turd in a silk
stocking", to which he retorts: "what a shame that such a great man
should have been so badly brought up." Talleyrand, as seen by
Guitry, may have his warts and his peccadilloes, but he is evidently as
great a man as Bonaparte, if not greater. Waging a war is
easy, any fool with an - er - Napoléon complex can do
that. Forging an alliance that will bring a lasting peace to the
continent of Europe - that requires a special genius. If it was
left to Sacha Guitry, Talleyrand would have been canonised and his
remains given pride of place in the Panthéon long ago.
Guitry's interest in Talleyrand, and more crucially his personal
identification with him, is easily accounted for. Immediately
after the Liberation in 1944, Guitry was arrested and imprisoned (for
sixty days) on a charge of collaboration during the Occupation.
Whilst it is true that Guitry thrived under the Occupation, much of his
creative output during this period expressed an overt anti-German
sentiment. This is most evident in his 1942 film
Le Destin fabuleux de
Désirée Clary, which openly ridiculed the
imperialist ambitions of Nazi German. Guitry's one faux pas was
to publish a historical text entitled
De
Jeanne d'Arc à Philippe Pétain which was judged
by his detractors to be anti-French and pro-Pétainist.
After his release from prison, Guitry fought long and hard to clear his
name, but whilst the charge of collaboration was ultimately dropped in
1947 his reputation had by this stage been irreparably damaged.
Like Talleyrand, history would judge him unfairly, and the most
patriotic of Frenchman would forever be tainted with the brand of
treason.
Le Diable boiteux was Sacha
Guitry's most earnest attempt at self-vindication. If he could
persuade his audience that Talleyrand had been misjudged, surely he
could convince them he was a similar victim of bad press? It was
a dangerous strategy, since by likening himself to Talleyrand Guitry
risked reinforcing the prejudices against himself. Guitry's
first script for the film was deemed to be too inflammatory by the
censor and was banned. Undeterred, he developed this into a stage
play entitled
Talleyrand,
which found some success when it was first performed in 1948. It
was this play, made up of several scenes from Talleyrand's long and
distinguished career, which provided the basis for
Le Diable boiteux, one of Guitry's
most ambitious films.
Naturally, Guitry (an accomplished actor as well as a great playwright
and filmmaker) took the central role of Talleyrand; indeed he appears
to positively revel in the part and would later reprise it in his 1955
magnum opus,
Napoléon. The rest
of the cast is made up of actors who had appeared in the stage
version. The part of Napoléon went to Émile Drain,
a French actor whose resemblance to the historical personage in his
later years is uncanny. Drain played Napoléon I in several
films, including Viktor Tourjansky's
L'Aiglon
(1931) and Léonce Perret's
Madame
Sans-Gêne (1924), as well as Guitry's previous films:
Les Perles de la couronne (1937)
and
Remontons les
Champs-Élysées (1938).
Guitry's scurrilous sense of humour enlivens what might otherwise have
been a dry period piece, so that
Le
Diable boiteux is not only one of his most attractively shot
historical films, it is also one of his funniest. Only
Guitry would think of getting the four actors who are cast as
Talleyrand's faithful servants to also play the four heads of state
whom Talleyrand serves under (Napoléon through to King
Louis-Philippe). In one memorable scene (possibly the best sight
gag in any Guitry film), the four servants hobble up the stairs after
their lame master, and we are left pondering who is leading whom.
Is Talleyrand merely a public servant, a lackey to the great men who
govern France, or is he the real power behind the throne, the kingmaker
and architect of a new world order...?
Le Diable boiteux is an
entertaining diversion that offers some interesting perspectives on an
important and fascinating historical figure, but it does leave you feeling a little
queasy. Just how certain can we be that our present heads of
state are really in charge of things? What if they are mere
puppets controlled by a Talleyrand-like arch-manipulator, for purposes
we cannot even guess...? The one we should be
watching is not the figurehead that we supposedly choose for ourselves,
but the shadowy person in the background who is pulling the strings,
the devil with the limp...
© James Travers 2013
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Next Sacha Guitry film:
Toâ (1949)