Film Review
Having made a series of documentary shorts from the late 1920s,
director Pierre Chenal finally made his feature debut with
Le Martyre de l'obèse,
adapted from Henri Béraud's novel of the same title, one of two
works which won the author the Prix Goncourt in 1922. Somewhere
between comedy and drama, the film is a dark satire on society's
attitudes towards the obese and still has a resonance (it would take
a very brave filmmaker to make a film like this today). The film's
malicious humour is something that Chenal would bring to some of his
later films, although this is his least typical work and is strikingly
different, both in tone and subject matter, from his far better known
forays into film noir territory,
L'Alibi (1937) and
Le Dernier Tournant
(1939). Although he appears like a creepy comicbook parody of
Alfred Hitchcock for much of the film, André Berley has an
arresting screen personality and brings more than a hint of pathos to
his portrayal of a big man overly concerned with his appearance.
This likeably weird film ends with a cogent message: to be happy, just
ignore the prejudices of others and be yourself. Besides, what is
a silly little romance compared with the riotous goings on at the 100
Kilograms Club?
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Pierre Chenal film:
La Rue sans nom (1934)
Film Synopsis
Angèle Léger is outraged when she discovers that her
husband Henri has been seeing another woman, so outraged that she
decides to take a lover herself, just to make Henri jealous. The
man she selects for her purpose is Canabol, a well-built man who weighs
no less than one hundred kilograms. Having fallen in love with
Angèle, Canabol decides that he must drastically lose weight if
he is to stand a chance of stealing her affections. Alas, his
efforts to become slim by dieting and fitness training prove totally
futile...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.