Film Review
After his experience with the company Cinéromans, for whom he
directed
La Goutte de sang
(1924), Jean Epstein could well have been forgiven for turning his back
on commercial cinema altogether. Fortunately, shortly afterwards
he found in Alexandre Kamenka a producer who not only allowed his
directors artistic freedom but positively encouraged it. Kamenka
had just taken over the management of Films de Albatros, a Paris-based
film studio staffed mostly by Russian émigrés which was
committed to making prestige films to rival Hollywood's
superproductions. Epstein made just four films for Albatros
-
Le Lion des Mogols,
(1924),
L'Affiche (1924),
Le Double Amour
(1925) and
Les Aventures de Robert
Macaire (1925) - but the freedom he enjoyed gave him ample scope
to refine and extend his filmmaking technique in preparation for his subsequent
auteur masterpieces.
Le Lion des Mogols is the most
fanciful and most blatantly commercial of Epstein's films. Part
melodrama, part social satire, it begins with what looks like a spoof
of a Cecil B. DeMille epic and ends as a caustic satire on the film
industry of the period (doubtless informed by Epstein's run-ins with
his bosses at Pathé and Cinéromans). Abel Gance
described the plot as somewhat idiotic, although the plot was supplied
not by Epstein but by the film's lead actor Ivan Mosjoukine, who was
not only Albatros's biggest star but also the most famous actor in
French cinema of the 1920s. With his hypnotic stare and powerful
physique, Mosjoukine had an electrifying screen presence that drew
massive audiences to all of his films, many of which are now classics
of the silent era - Alexandre Volkoff's
Kean (1924), Marcel L'Herbier's
Feu Mathias Pascal (1926) and
Viktor Tourjansky's
Michel Strogoff (1926).
As Mosjoukine was himself an émigré, it's easy to make
the connection between him and the solitary exile he portrays so
vividly in
Le Lion des Mogols.
The film's enormous success made Ivan Mosjoukine a worldwide star and
provided a massive boost to Albatros's prestige. As for Epstein,
there's a welcome return to the exuberant impressionistic style of his
early films, but this comes only in the film's second part. After
a tantalising prologue which anticipates the events to come, the film
begins in classic Hollywood epic mode, with an exotic first course set
in a lavishly reconstructed Tibetan holy city. There's not much
room for directorial innovation here so Epstein suppresses his auteur
instincts and instead gets as much value as he can from Albatros's
genius set and costume designers. This duty out of the way, he
can then let his creativity run riot in the film's second half (which
craftily replays the narrative of the first half).
Once the location has shifted to modern day (circa mid-1920s) Paris,
Le Lion des Mogols ceases to be a
mundane piece of exotica and becomes an astute social satire, which is
made both humorous and poignant by Epstein's uninhibited
impressionistic flourishes. Superimposition is used repeatedly to
emphasise Mosjoukine's feelings of isolation in the throbbing
metropolis, most movingly in a scene set in a Parisian nightclub that
reminds us of the justly praised merry-go-round sequence in
Coeur
fidèle (1923). By placing Mosjoukine at the hub
of a swirling mass of activity Epstein stresses his tragic detachment
from the world he seeks desperately to be a part of.
In the very next sequence, Epstein uses motion even more dramatically
to depict a stark change of mood in the protagonist - from self-pitying
solitariness to fierce nonchalance. Accompanied by a girl he met
in the nightclub and a tramp he just happens to come across, Mosjoukine
stands defiantly in a taxi as it is driven at breakneck speed down the
Champs-Élysées, looking like a latter-day Ben Hur.
For Epstein, speed was the perfect embodiment of freedom and, being a
lover of fast cars himself, it is no accident that this became one of
the defining motifs of his work. Life in motion was what Epstein
sought to capture on film, and in at least two sequences in
Le Lion des Mogols, he does that
brilliantly.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Epstein film:
Le Double amour (1925)
Film Synopsis
For the past fifteen years, a holy city in Tibet has lived under the
tyrannous rule of the Great Khan. A palace guard,
Roundgito-Singh, is told by a fortune teller that he will become the
city's beloved ruler, providing he is not diverted from his destiny by
an untrue woman. Roundgito-Singh's attempt to rescue a virgin
from the wicked Khan ends in failure and the prince is forced to flee
his country. After crossing many forests and deserts he ends up
on an ocean liner, where he falls under the spell of a film actress,
Lady Anna, whose past is a mystery to all. Taken with the
enigmatic foreigner, Lady Anna persuades her producer, Monsieur Morel,
to engage him as an actor on her next film. Seeing
Roundgito-Singh as a dangerous rival, Morel fools him into signing a
dud cheque. If the prince dares to take Anna from him, the
ruthless financier will betray him to the
police...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.