Film Review
It was in the 1930s that the French film director Julien Duvivier was at
his most productive and artistically inspired. Amid the slew of now
highly regarded classics -
La
Tête d'un homme (1933),
La
Bandera (1935),
La Belle
équipe (1936),
Pépé le Moko
(1937) - there are many lesser works that have fallen somewhat by the wayside
but yet deserve a fresh reappraisal.
These include two of Duvivier's least
typical films -
Le Golem (1936) and
La Charrette fantôme
(1939) - which offer a rare excursion into the realm of fantasy and horror.
Both films are of interest because they reference earlier masterpieces of
the genre - Paul Wegener's
Der Golem, wie
er in die Welt kam (1920) and Victor Sjöström's
The Phantom Carriage
(1921). Duvivier's
Le Golem is in fact a direct sequel to Wegener's
film, loosely based on a play by Jiri Voskovec and Jan Werich.
Le Golem is also unusual in that it was not filmed in France, but
at the Barrandov Studios in Prague, something that gives it a very distinctive
feel which sets it apart from Duvivier's other films of this decade.
The set design, camerawork and lighting are all visibly influenced by German
expressionism of the 1920s, but whilst such visual artistry is of a high
order it does not entirely conceal the budgetary limitations. The sets
occasionally look cheap and are all too readily revealed to be made of cardboard
and polystyrene when the Golem finally goes on its killer rampage.
It is hard not to cringe when the clay colossus starts bending iron bars
that are clearly made of rubber and knocking down walls constructed
from blocks of Jablite. The film's other notable flaw is a rambling
plot that, setting a template for subsequent disaster movies, forces the
spectator to sit through over an hour of tedious talky intrigue before the
narrative finally comes to life and plunges us into an orgy of wild and bloody
confusion. It's also a let down that when the Golem finally does wake
up (fifteen minutes before the end of the film), he looks like a poor man's
Frankenstein Monster - a fat, middle-aged man with an anger management problem.
The Golem is much scarier when he is just a lifeless statue, shot from
below and eerily lit from one side.
Thankfully, there's enough star power in the cast to keep us awake until
the Boris Karloff tribute act gets underway. Harry Baur - the lead
of several earlier Duvivier films, notably the director's first hit,
David
Golder (1931) - is the obvious casting choice for the role of the debauched
and ever so slightly deranged Emperor Rudolf II. Baur was always at
his best in colourful roles such as this and his unashamedly over-the-top
performance is the film's main delight - he is far more frightening than
the animated lump of clay of the film's title. Roger Karl is almost
as chilling (with a genuinely creepy Nazi-like aura) as Baur's right-hand
man, Chancellor Lang. If we dare to liken Baur's Emperor Rudolf to
Adolf Hitler, it naturally follows that Lang is Heinrich Himmler. Among
the rest of the principal cast, only Jany Holt distinguishes herself, as
the stoical heroine Rachel.
In common with much of Duvivier's oeuvre, there is a darkly humorous vein
to the film, which can be regarded not so much as your classic monster movie
but more a grim satire on human credulity. In one memorable scene,
Baur is easily duped into accepting gifts of supposedly priceless artefacts
from a charlatan who takes obvious pleasure in exploiting his gullibility.
These include alleged nails from Noah's Ark and a jewelled sword that apparently
was once in the possession of the Emperor Charlemagne. Held up before
him as the most blatant of phallic symbols, the sword positively drives Baur
to a frenzy of desire, the words "I must have it!" visibly stencilled in
every part of his face. Here's one power-mad despot who is clearly
in need of a substitute penis. The only thing preventing us from enjoying
Le Golem as a wicked black comedy is the fact that it is so depressingly
prescient of the fate that would befall the Jews in the ghettos within a
few years of the film being made. Maybe this is why it remains one
of Duvivier's most overlooked films.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Julien Duvivier film:
Pépé le Moko (1937)
Film Synopsis
In the early years of the 17th century, the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II
rules Bohemia with an iron grip whilst pursuing the alchemists' dream of
endowing inanimate matter with life. Foremost of his victims are the
Jews of the Prague ghettos, whom he persecutes with a vengeance, driving
them to the brink of starvation. The Jews take comfort from the legend
of the Golem, a clay statue that, in an earlier era of persecution, came
to life to save them from their oppressor. Presently, the Golem stands
inert and abandoned in the attic of the Rabbi Jacob. Offended by the
Emperor's decision to marry Isabel of Spain, the Countess Strada steals the
statue but it is later recovered by the chief of police and taken to the
imperial palace. Rudolf is incensed when his attempt to bring the statue
to life is unsuccessful and he proceeds to order the arrest and execution
of the Jewish leaders. The Golem is the Jews' one last hope, and in
their hour of direst need he is not about to let them down...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.