Film Review
Adapted from Georges Ohnet's 1882 novel of the same title,
Le Maître de forges
exemplifies the kind of formulaic melodrama that was enormously popular
in the 1930s but which now appears unbearably hollow and dated.
Its lead actress Gaby Morlay would become closely associated with this
sort of film, to the extent that she can legitimately be described as
the queen of the French melodrama (a term than now seems horribly
derisive). The film's main point of interest is that it was the
first sound film to be directed by Fernand Rivers, who had, during the
previous two decades, directed and starred in a series of short films
featuring the popular comic character Plouf, whom he had created.
On
Le Maître de forges
Rivers was assisted by Abel Gance (credited as the film's supervisor),
who was struggling both financially and morally after the catastrophic
failure of his first sound film,
La
Fin du monde (1931). Gance's input was somewhat more
than supervisory - he had a hand in the screenplay and probably
directed several scenes in the film. Gance also worked with
Rivers on his next film,
La Dame aux
camélias (1934), and by the end of the decade Rivers was
a fully fledged filmmaker, impressing most with his period
dramas. In the late 1940s, towards the end of his career, Fernand
Rivers remade
Le Maître de
forges (God knows why) with Hélène
Perdrière and Jean Chevrier in the lead roles - a film that is
as dull and forgettable as Rivers' first attempt.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Abel Gance film:
Le Roman d'un jeune homme pauvre (1935)
Film Synopsis
The wealthy Claire de Beaulieu is about to marry the Duke de Bligny, an
impoverished nobleman, when disaster strikes. Her family ruined,
Claire is not surprised when her fiancé gives her up to marry
instead a rich heiress. She allows herself to be married by
Philippe Derblay, the master of an ironworks and a man for whom she has
no feelings. Despite her husband's devoted attentions, Claire
cannot bring herself to love him and insists that they sleep in
separate beds. When the Duke de Bligny challenges Philippe to a
duel Claire suddenly realises how much her husband means to her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.