Film Review
The most perfect example of French poetic realism is arguably
Le Quai des brumes, a doom-laden
masterpiece which, with its ill-fated romance, shady underworld
characters and brutal fatalism, evokes the essence of classic film noir
at its most primitive and most eloquent.
This is the film that
cemented the partnership of director Marcel Carné and
screenwriter Jacques Prévert, who had drawn immediate critical
attention with their previous two films -
Jenny
(1936) and
Drôle de drame (1936) -
and who would go on to jointly craft some of the most memorable
offerings in French cinema -
Le Jour se lève (1939),
Les Visiteurs du soir (1942)
and their magnum opus
Les Enfants du paradis
(1945). Carné's immense technical skill and talent for
drenching his films in atmosphere, coupled with Prévert's flair for making
seemingly banal dialogue sound poetic, are powerfully illustrated in
Le Quai des brumes, which deserves
its reputation as one of the greatest of all French films, even
if it does make you want to throw yourself off the nearest high tower.
One's immediate impression of this film is how persistently and
intensely gloomy it is. The sets, interiors and exteriors, are
constantly steeped in fog and shadows. There is an aura of doom
and decay which infects every character with a profound sense of
hopelessness, making them resemble condemned men solemnly awaiting
their execution. The eternal fog is a physical
manifestation of the apathy that has drained the resolve of the
protagonists, icy wreaths of mist that bind them to their fate.
In true film noir fashion,
Le Quai
des brumes is essentially about the illusion of freedom and the
impossibility of escaping from one's personal destiny. Virtually
all of the characters in the film dream of a better life, but lack the
resolve or the opportunity to make their dreams a reality. It is
as if the fog and the shadows which envelop them, like matted cobwebs,
are holding them back, pinning them to their respective grooves until
death appears and brings a merciful release, the only escape from this
sodden swamp of undiluted misery. No, it probably isn't the best
advertising campaign the town of Le Havre could have wished for.
As befits its classic status,
Le
Quai des brumes offers a plethora of talent on both sides of the
camera. The cast brings together some of the finest French actors
of the time, including four
monstres
sacrés - Jean
Gabin, Michèle Morgan, Michel Simon and Pierre Brasseur - and a
host of exceptionally gifted character actors - Édouard
Delmont, Raymond Aimos, Robert Le Vigan and René
Génin - not forgetting the cute little white dog who shamelessly outstages
every actor he shares a shot with. Gabin was, by this stage, a major star of
French cinema, having grown to epitomise the ordinary working class
hero in such films as Jean Renoir's
La Grande illusion (1937) and
Julien Duvivier's
Pépé le Moko (1937).
Le Quai des brumes was the
first of four films in which Gabin and Morgan appeared together,
forming one of French cinema's most memorable romantic pairings.
Although they fell deeply in love whilst making this film, the two
actors did not pursue an off-screen romance, as Morgan had no interest
in starting an affair with a married man. The intensity of the
feelings that Gabin and Morgan had for one another is evident in the
scene in which they kiss, a scene that is charged with electrifying eroticism
and tragic poignancy. It was only two films back that
Michèle Morgan, aged 17, had had her first leading role, opposite Raimu in
Gribouille
(1937). It was the role of Nelly in
Le Quai des brumes that established
her as a star and made her one of the most sought after screen actresses
of her generation.
Although it is Gabin and Morgan who dominate this film - looking
uncannily like Bogart and Bacall in
To Have and Have Not (1944) -
they do not completely eclipse the contributions from their illustrious
co-stars. In one of his most chilling performances, Michel Simon
provides the perfect counterpoint to Gabin's morally flawed but
likeable hero, playing the villain Zabel as a fiend who barely manages
to conceal his diabolical intent beneath a thin veneer of
respectability. As vile as his character is, Simon still manages
to imbue him with a smattering of pathos - his Zabel is not so much inherently evil as
a weak man governed by impulses that he cannot control. Equally, Pierre Brasseur brings depth and
subtle menace to his interpretation of the vicious pimp Lucien, defying
the familiar gangster stereotype by playing him less as a mindless thug
and more as a tragically insecure loser. Robert Le Vigan steals
the focus early on in the film with a humorously melancholic portrayal
of an artist who has clearly been reading too much Sartre - his sudden
departure (à la Reggie Perrin) allows
Prévert to slip in some pretty sick black humour later on.
The credits on the other side of the camera are no less
impressive. The art design was by none other than Alexandre
Trauner, whose talent for creating realistic settings with a character
and mood that aligns perfectly with the substance of the film is best
illustrated by his atmospheric designs for
Le Quai des brumes. Trauner's
designs are beautifully complemented by Eugene Schufftan's
cinematography, which has echoes of German expressionism with its stark
black and white tones and use of shadow to convey lurking menace and a
sense of inescapable doom. It is Schufftan's inspired lighting
and camerawork choices which give the film its striking realism, most
visibly in the exterior location sequences which were shot in Le Havre,
bringing a hint of near-documentary realism which is seldom found in
French cinema of this era. The film was edited by
René Le Hénaff, a master of his metier who would later
distinguish himself as a film director with such films as
Le Colonel Chabert (1943).
Composer Maurice Jaubert contributes one of his most celebrated scores,
including the film's haunting theme which, with its evocation of a
violent sea storm, allows us to visualise the dark forces that
will ensnare the protagonists and propel them to their doom. And,
in case you were wondering, Miss Morgan's eye-catching see-through
raincoat was designed by Coco Chanel.
Le Quai des brumes was not
unanimously well-received by the critics when it was first released in
1938. Its ominous mood - doubtless influenced by the prevailing
political situation in France (the failure of the Popular Front
coalition government) and wider political unrest (the Spanish Civil War
and the rise of Fascism in Germany and Italy) - made it a hard sell and
some were quick to dismiss it as pro-Fascist propaganda. A review
in a July edition of the Parisian newspaper
Le
Petit journal described it as a
film noir that is both immoral and
demoralising, one that could only have a harmful effect on the
public.
In 1940, a spokesman of the Vichy government
publicly stated: "If we lost the war, it was because of
Le Quai des brumes" - an
interesting interpretation of events. Others were far more
positive in their assessment of the film and praised it for its
artistic strengths and the way in which it captured the mood of the
time. The film's adverse press did not prevent it from being a
commercial success and its merits were honoured when it won the Prix
Louis Delluc and a special prize at the 1938 Venice Film
Festival. Today,
Le Quai des
brumes is highly regarded, considered not only one of Marcel
Carné's finest achievements but also one of the absolute
highpoints of French filmmaking in the 1930s. The film's
influence can be felt in two of the most
significant aesthetic developments in the cinema of the following decade,
Italian neo-realism and classic American film noir, as well as in the
early films of Ingmar Bergman, whose
Port
of Call (1948) feels like an affectionate homage to
Le Quai des brumes.
© James Travers 2000
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Next Marcel Carné film:
Le Jour se lève (1939)