Film Review
Of the many films Julien Duvivier made in the 1930s,
Le Paquebot Tenacity is one that is
most easily overlooked. A rough and ready adaptation of a popular
but tediously dull stage play by Charles Vildrac, the film probably
deserves its comparative obscurity. The only thing that it has in
its favour is that it is the earliest of Duvivier's films in which
poetic realist style of his subsequent masterpieces is readily
apparent, albeit in a fairly primitive form. A common failing of
screen versions of stage plays of this era is their inherent
staginess. Duvivier overcomes this by shooting virtually all of
the film on location in the port of Le Havre, the setting of Marcel
Carné's
Le Quai des brumes (1938), the
most perfect example of poetic realism.
Le Havre has an ambiance unlike any other French town and, with its
constant background activity and indefinable aura of melancholia, is a
perfect setting for any romantic drama. Because it contains so
much location footage,
Le Paquebot
Tenacity has a newsreel feel to it, although the vibrant
exteriors scenes sit uncomfortably alongside the dead studio
interiors. It the locations scenes that work best, giving the
film not only a striking realism but also a subtle poetic
quality. The photography is imbued with a sense of unattainable
yearning, mocking the cheery optimism of the main protagonists as they
set out, or try to set out, on a new life in a foreign clime.
Whilst it may not be quite so bleak,
Le
Paquebot Tenacity has a remarkable similarity with Duvivier's
later
La Belle équipe
(1936). Both films depict a friendship that ends in betrayal and
disillusionment, the main characters falling out over a woman.
It's the classic love triangle scenario, with Albert Préjean and
Hubert Prélier both succumbing to the obvious charms of the
extremely photogenic Marie Glory, who had previously starred in Marcel
L'Herbier's epic
L'Argent (1928).
Préjean and Prélier make an effective contrast, their
different acting styles reflecting their character's different natures,
the one out-going and decisive, the other introverted and
hesitant. Prélier was primarily a stage actor (he appeared
in only half a dozen films) and had already played Ségard in the
original stage production of
Le
Paquebot Tenacity. Préjean was, at the time, one of
the biggest stars in French cinema, although he would soon be overtaken
by Jean Gabin, with Duvivier's help. Like Gabin, Préjean
had a rugged charm and was at his best in proletarian hero parts, as he
amply demonstrates in this film. Uneven and lethargically paced,
Le Paquebot Tenacity is by no means
a classic but it has its own charm and presages the greater films that
were to come from the Duvivier stable.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Julien Duvivier film:
Maria Chapdelaine (1934)
Film Synopsis
Paris, at the time of the Great Depression. Bastien, a manual
worker, persuades his timid friend, Ségard, to leave with him
for Canada, to start a new life in a country where, according to the
publicity films, everything is possible. The two men arrive in
the port of Le Havre, ready to depart on the ocean liner
Tenacity. They take lodgings at a boarding house where they both
fall under the spell of the charming serving girl
Thérèse. When the boat's departure is delayed,
Bastien takes advantage of the hiatus to court
Thérèse. One evening, he gets her drunk and lures
her into bed with him, without his friend knowing. The next day,
Bastien has made up his mind to stay in France with
Thérèse...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.