Film Review
It probably wasn't Marcel Blistène's intention, when taking on a
biopic of one of the Catholic Church's most revered saints, to deliver
something that is only slightly less frightening than
The
Omen and
The Exorcist combined, but this
is what he ended up with. To say that
Le Sorcier du ciel is one of the
weirder French films of the 1940s is putting it mildly. It is
strange beyond belief, and if it doesn't prompt you to renounce the
Devil and throw your lot in with Christianity, it will almost certainly
give you nightmares for the rest of your life. There's scarcely a
French horror film that is anywhere near as scary as what this
supposedly reverential biopic foists on its unsuspecting audience in
its more spookily deranged moments.
And it's not as if Marcel Blistène had any particular
association with the horror genre or fantasy in general. He
directed only ten films, most of which are happily forgotten
today. Blistène's forte was the conventional melodrama,
two of which feature Édith Piaf making a fairly decent stab at
being a dramatic actress -
Étoile sans lumière
(1946) and
Les Amants de demain
(1959). Blistène's most well-regarded film is
Macadam
(1946), a stylish film noir which he took over from Jacques Feyder and
which helped to set Simone Signoret on the road to stardom.
The creepy expressionistic design of this film is taken a few steps
further in
Le Sorcier du ciel,
providing the terrifying sequences in which the protagonist (a young
Jean-Baptiste-Marie Vianney, better known as the Curé d'Ars)
fights his personal battle against the Devil.
Le Sorcier du ciel is set in
France in the years following the Revolution and Napoleon's wars.
It is a heathen land - godless, debauched and profligate, eerily
evocative of Hieronymus Bosch's lurid landscapes (only in grimly
oppressive black and white). As he makes his way through this
forsaken Hell-on-Earth, the central priest (inexpressively but
effectively portrayed by Georges Rollin) encounters nothing but
hostility from the happily licentious inhabitants of Ars. To add
to his woes, he has Satan constantly whittering in his ear like a
second-rate Valentine Dyall telling him he has backed the wrong horse
and is doomed to fail.
It is the priest's struggle with Satan (or, should that be the Satanic
side of his own nature?) that is the most interesting part of the film,
certainly the part that Blistène and his cinematographer Charles
Bauer had most fun with. Like pretty well all biopics,
Le Sorcier du ciel fails to do
justice to its subject, and indeed most of Vianney's long and eventful
life is overlooked as the film confines itself almost exclusively to
his eventful first few years in Ars. However, as a depiction of a
man's struggle against his darker instincts the film is startlingly
effective, and seldom in cinema does Satan have a more tangible
presence than he does here, helped by a supremely demonic chorus of lighting and sound effects.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
One day in 1818, a humble village priest in his early thirties is
making his way down a country road to his new parish, in the town of
Ars. As is typical across France after the Revolution and
Napoleonic wars, the inhabitants of Ars are indifferent to
religion. Sunday is no longer a day of worship but a day like any
other, with work during the day and merrymaking in the evening.
On his arrival, the priest immediately arouses mistrust and
suspicion. He is not only mocked for the austere life he leads,
he is considered by some to be a bad influence. As he tries in
vain to redeem the faithless people of Ars, the priest has his own
faith put to the test by Satan. When the priest cures a crippled
boy of his affliction, a miracle is proclaimed and he begins to have an
influence on the community. Once again Satan taunts him, claiming
ownership of the miracle. The priest's ultimate triumph over
Satan strengthens his purpose and by the time of his death he will have
achieved a complete spiritual transformation of
Ars...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.