Film Review
Le Rendez-vous des quais is
possibly the most remarkable French film of the 1950s.
In a decade that saw French cinema
pass through a phase of stale uniformity, with little to distinguish
one picture from another, this film stands out as something unique and
deliriously refreshing. An engaging social drama that honestly
confronts the main preoccupations of its day, the film has a raw documentary feel that makes it
virtually indistinguishable from Italian neo-realism. Shot entirely on location, with
non-professional actors, natural lighting and groundbreaking
handheld camerawork, it boldly prefigures the
early work of the French New Wave. Had the film been widely seen
in the mid-1950s as intended, it would have undoubtedly spearheaded a revolution in the art of cinema,
and not only in France. It may even had some impact on the
political landscape of the time, perhaps allowing Algeria to gain
her independence with far less bloodshed.
Instead, such is the wisdom of the ruling elite that the film was consigned to an early
grave, sent into oblivion by an over-sensitive French
government which saw the film as too dangerous to be shown.
This was the first of three feature-length films to be directed by Paul
Carpita, the son of a Marseilles dockworker who, a teacher by
profession, never considered himself more than an amateur
filmmaker. In 1943, aged 21, Carpita had served in the French
resistance and later became a fully paid up member of the Communist
party. After the war, having acquired a taste for filmmaking, he
founded the Cinépax group and shot a series of documentaries
about the working class people of Marseilles. Carpita's
left-wing political leanings are evident in
Le Rendez-vous des quais, which
portrays union members as modest self-sacrificing heroes and bosses as
manipulative villains who will sacrifice any principle for a quick
profit. The French riot police (CRS) are depicted not as
impartial law enforcers but as quasi-Fascist bullyboys, the tools of an
intolerant and unjust State. The film's commentary on the war in Indochina
is no less compromising. One sequence depicts scores of coffins
containing fallen soldiers being unloaded from cargo ships at the port,
a powerful statement of the true cost of warfare.
Predictably, the Censor (acting on behalf of or at the behest of the
French government) deemed the film to be far too inflammatory to be
seen by the average Joe and an outright ban was issued as soon as the
film was released in 1955. After the film's first public
screening in Marseilles, all prints of the film were confiscated by the
police and subsequent showings prohibited, as the film was considered a
threat to public order. Long after the film was thought to have
been lost forever, a set of reels was discovered by chance in 1988, in
the film archives of Bois d'Arcy, a small town near Versailles.
The film had its first authorised release in 1990, thirty-six years
after it had been shot, and was widely acknowledged as a revolutionary
masterpiece of its time. This belated success encouraged Carpita
to make his second film,
Les Sables
Mouvants (1996) at the age of 74, from a script he had written
in 1958.
Le Rendez-vous des quais was
not the first social realist drama to be made in France but it is most
probably the first film of this kind to be shot in a completely
naturalist manner without regard to the sensitivities of the
Censor. Had Carpita been a professional filmmaker, rather than an
enthusiastic amateur, he would have known that the State would never
have allowed the film to be shown. The war in Indochina had been
a costly national disaster and was about to be repeated nearer to home,
in Algeria. In addition, the French government feared the power
of the unions and would never have countenanced a film which showed
them scoring a moral victory over the bosses. Carpita's integrity
came at a cost, since the film's sequestration robbed him of the
enthusiasm and resources to continue making films. Although
recognition came to him very late in his life, Carpita is now
considered to be the perfect embodiment of film auteur and an inspiration
to future maverick filmmakers who have the guts to tell it as it really is.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Marseilles, 1953. Robert Fournier is a young dock worker who
wants to marry Marcelle, an employee in a biscuit factory. But
times are hard and the couple are unable to afford an apartment, so
they have no choice but to go on living with their parents. The
war in Indochina provides the port with the bulk of its work.
Incoming boats deliver coffins and wounded soldiers. Those that
embark are laden with more weaponry, more tanks, more instruments of
death. En masse, the dock workers decide to take a stand against
the war by calling a strike. Robert is lured away from his union
commitments by the promise of an apartment. He becomes a scab,
and risks being alienated by his brother, his friends and the woman he
loves...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.