Film Review
Le Secret de Polichinelle bears a more than passing
resemblance to Marcel Pagnol's early films of the 1930s but it was in fact
adapted from a stage play by Pierre Wolff and directed by the far less well-known
director André Berthomieu. One of French cinema's most prolific
filmmakers (he directed almost seventy films in thirty years), Berthomieu
was adept at turning out middlebrow crowdpleasers of this ilk but he was
by no means an auteur, and all but a handful of his films (
L'Ange de la nuit,
Pas si bête) now languish in obscurity.
Despite its unpromising scenario,
Le Secret de Polichinelle
is one of Berthomieu's more engaging offerings, and it owes this entirely
to the sublime performances from its lead actors, Raimu and Françoise
Rosay.
In the hands of a less capable actor than Raimu, the scene in which the prim
bourgeois capitalist Jouvenel is transformed into a doting grandfather by
the sight of his infant grandson could so easily have been unbearably slushy.
We can all recall Raimu's heartrending scene at the end of Pagnol's
La Femme du boulanger
(1938) when the baker forgives his unfaithful wife, and the actor is no less
affecting in the key scene in
Le Secret de Polichinelle,
where Jouvenel's humanity gets the better of his cold bourgeois reserve.
Rosay has almost the same impact in a similar scene later in the film, and,
as she gently plays on our heartstrings, we can easily see why she was regarded
as one of the greatest French actresses of her generation, her talents sought
after by such distinguished filmmakers as Marcel Carné and Jacques
Feyder.
Le Secret de Polichinelle could so easily have
been a great film if only it were not for its mundane script and Berthomieu's
mostly uninspired direction (for the most part, the film looks like a filmed
stageplay). In addition to the knockout performances from Raimu and
Rosay, there is an amusing turn from André Alerme (a talented character
actor with considerable comic flair who is sadly all but forgotten today)
and some authentic contributions from Bernard Lancret and Janine Crispin.
Had it been a conventional melodrama, the film would have been a tad stilted
and stuffy, but thankfully it is pitched somewhere between comedy and drama,
thereby making the best use of the talents its two legendary lead actors.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Monsieur and Madame Jouvenel are a respectable bourgeois couple who
intend that their son Henri will marry the daughter of respectable
bourgeois parents and follow their example. Unfortunately, Henri
not only has a girlfriend he knows his parents will disapprove of but
also a five year old son, Robert. When this bombshell is dropped
at their feet the Jouvenels are understandably appalled and will have
nothing more to do with Henri and his distinctly unbourgeois
menagerie. When he sees a photograph of little Robert, Monsieur
Jouvenel has a change of heart and, without his wife knowing, pays a
personal call on Henri's girlfriend. The fusty businessman is
soon won over by the adorable little boy and starts making regular
visits, bringing presents whenever he calls. Completely unaware
of this, Madame Jouvenel decides she must see her grandson and, without
telling her husband, pays him a visit...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.