Film Review
André Hugon secured his place in film history when he directed
the first French sound film,
Les
Trois Masques (1929). His subsequent anti-war film
Le Héros de la Marne had the
more dubious honour of being one of the first films to be burned by the
Nazis after they had taken control of Paris 1940. It could be
argued that in doing so the Nazis were doing French cinema a service,
because
Le Héros de la Marne
is arguably one of the worst war films made in France - at least that
is the impression one gets when watching the poor quality print that
somehow survived being destroyed by the Germans.
With war looking increasingly unavoidable in the late 1930s, strident
anti-war films of this kind were quite prevalent and some - notably
Abel Gance's
J'Accuse (1938) - were more
effective than others in raising awareness of what another European
conflagration would mean for ordinary people. Hugon's film
suffers from an almost total lack of narrative coherence (the plot is
essentially just a lazily cobbled together succession of
clichés) and an even more obvious lack of resources.
Archive footage (of generally poor quality) is badly spliced into the
film, with results that are often more comical than dramatic. In
a few scenes, some soldiers stand in front of a blown-up photograph and
give an over-excited commentary on an air-raid and dog fight being
waged above their heads. The appalling cross-cutting between
archive film and poorly realised studio scenes totally robs such scenes
of any credibility.
And then there are the performances, which are truly in a class of
their own. Raimu may have been a great actor but even he was not
immune to turning in an unbearably hammy performance when circumstances
were against him (usually in the form of a bad script and clueless
director).
Le Héros de
la Marne does Raimu absolutely no favours whatsoever and for
once his attempts to arouse the audience's sympathy fall completely
flat. Raimu is not alone in turning in a bad performance - the
only member of the cast who manages to acquit himself is Édouard
Delmont, whose presence brings a sobering reality to ever scene he
appears in and hints at how much more powerful the film might have been
in more capable hands. It is possible that, in its
original, unexpurgated state,
Le
Héros de la Marne was a film worth watching, one that did
engage the spectator's interest and effectively argued against going to
war. But from what remains of this film, it seems unlikely that
any of this could have been the case.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In a small village in Marne in 1914, Lefrançois forbids his son
Jean from marrying Hélène. When she finds she is
pregnant with Jean's child, Hélène leaves the area and
moves to Amiens. When war is declared, Jean enlists and
becomes a fighter pilot, the hero of his squadron.
Hélène plays her part when she delivers a vital message
to the French troops on the eve of a massive German offensive.
Despite his age, Lefrançois enlists as a soldier, but loses his
sight in combat. Minutes after the armistice is signed in 1918,
Jean is killed in the midst of a fierce air battle.
Lefrançois' family cannot break the news of Jean's death to the
crippled war veteran...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.