Film Review
Le Jour se lève is
perhaps the bleakest of all French films. A doom-laden poetic
realist masterpiece, it evokes the era in which it was made more
vividly than any other film and still has the power to fill its
spectator with a sense of utter desolation as the final reel chugs
towards its devastating conclusion.
This was the fourth
collaboration of director Marcel Carné and screenwriter Jacques
Prévert, and easily their best after their subsequent triumph,
Les Enfants du paradis
(1945). Even grimmer than Carné's earlier gloom-fests
Le
Quai des brumes (1938) and
Hôtel
du Nord (1938),
Le Jour
se lève is a film that seems to be consumed by fatalistic
despair and offers not even the meanest glimmer of hope as it follows a
condemned man on his final journey through his barbed memories and
shattered illusions.
When Carné and Prévert came to make this film, there was
a prevailing mood of pessimism. Dismal clouds of foreboding hung
heavy across the continent of Europe, if not the whole world.
Many European countries had succumbed to fascism and those that had not
feared that they would go the same way. Democracy appeared to be
a dying phenomenon, and as Germany put all its energies into building
up its military might in a determined attempt to reclaim something of
its former empire, war seemed inevitable. In France, there was
little to cheer the ordinary working class man and woman. The
Popular Front, which promised a workers' utopia in the mid 1930s, was
long since dead and buried and the present rightwing government had no
time for the rights of the sweating masses. No surprise
then that the hero of
Le Jour se
lève, François (superbly portrayed by Jean Gabin)
should be one of the hard-pressed, cynically exploited throng of work
horses, a humble factory employee whose life is one of endless drudgery
that ends in what looks chillingly like a state-orchestrated
execution. The cramped little room that becomes François's
prison and deathtrap is a powerful metaphor for the grimly confined
lives of most working class people of the time as they became mere
drones for a socio-economic system that offered them no relief, no hope
of attainting a better life for themselves. Cinema does not get
much more depressing than this.
The darkly oppressive mood of the film derives principally from its
near-expressionistic design and photography, which clearly show the
influence of the late silent masterpieces of F.W. Murnau and Fritz Lang
whilst presaging subsequent American film noir. Alexandre
Trauner's striking set designs have aspects of both fairytale and grim
urban realism, adding an exquisite lyricism to the film's more romantic
passages whilst starkly exteriorising the inner turmoil which consumes
the hero when he realises he is a doomed man. Curt Courant
and Philippe Agostini's proto-noir cinematography, beautifully
atmospheric and unremittingly threatening, further accentuates the
feeling of entrapment, the sense that events have conspired to drive a
decent hardworking man to a harrowing final act of despair.
The film is also to be noted for its imaginative use of sound, which
adds to the slowly building tension, culminating in the final shot in
which a deathly silence is broken by the sound of an alarm clock going
off, like a belated bomb. The slow drumbeat of Maurice
Jaubert's score anticipates the drama's terrible denouement and
mockingly reminds us that in life the only way out is death. It
is ironic that this should be Jaubert's final film score - having
enlisted in the French army at the start of WWII, he would die from war
wounds almost a year to the day after
Le
Jour se lève had its French release.
As ever, Carné's casting choices for the film are flawless, as
are the performances his actors deliver. Jean Gabin was by this
stage in his career firmly ensconced in the public mind as the working
class hero, the figure with whom most cinemagoers could identify.
It is worth comparing Gabin's portrayal of Mr Average in
Le Jour se lève with his
previous interpretations, in films such as
La
Belle équipe (1936) and
La Grande illusion
(1937). Across Gabin's early career in the 1930s there is a
discernible migration away from the shallow romanticism of his early
roles towards a much more complex and nuanced characterisation, which
reaches its apotheosis in
Le Jour se
lève. The stolidity, cynicism and pent-up inner
conflict that define Gabin's portrayal of François prefigure the
roles that would predominate in the second phase of his career as the
older, wearier Gabin, a man who appears to have the idealism thrashed
out of him. Gabin's viscerally tortured portrayal in
Le Jour se lève, of a man
who sees his dreams cruelly shattered and is suddenly confronted with
his own mortality, is among the actor's most memorable and probably
ranks as his finest. The film also boasts superlative
contributions from Jules Berry, deliciously venal as the manipulative dog
trainer Valentin, and Arletty, magnificent as the archetypal tart with
a heart, the role for which she was best suited.
When
Le Jour se lève
was released in June 1939, it met with widespread critical acclaim and
was a commercial success, despite its depressing subject matter.
Predictably, however, the film was ill-thought-of by the Vichy
government and was one of a number of films that was banned in 1940 for
its supposedly demoralising influence on the French nation.
(Apparently, it was not France's lack of political and military will
which forced the country to capitulate to Nazi Germany; it was films
like this.) In 1947, Anatole Litvak directed an American
remake of the film,
The Long Night,
a popular film noir which featured Henry Fonda, Barbara Bel Geddes and
Vincent Price. When they bought the rights to make this film, RKO
insisted that all copies of Carné's film be destroyed;
fortunately, this agreement was not honoured and
Le Jour se lève resurfaced
in the 1950s, to even greater critical acclaim.
The film's moody
design and flashback narrative structure was replicated in countless
films noirs in the decades that followed and, now considered one of the
great classics of French cinema, it still continues to inspire film
directors the world over. Jean-Marc Moutout's acclaimed 2011 film
De bon matin is an obvious
homage to
Le Jour se lève,
a reminder of the power that 1930s French cinema continues to exert
over today's filmmakers.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Marcel Carné film:
Les Visiteurs du soir (1942)