Film Review
For
Le Trésor de Cantenac,
a rare departure into whimsical fairytale, Sacha Guitry adopts a
similar style of storytelling to his earlier
Le Roman d'un tricheur
(1936). For the most part, the film resembles a silent film, with
Guitry narrating large chunks of the story with a characteristically
tongue-in-cheek voiceover. The film's rural setting and colourful
cast of characters (played by actors whom Guitry takes a full six minutes to introduce
in a lengthy preamble) would be more at home in the oeuvre of
Marcel Pagnol, and there's a curiously Chaplinesque feel to the tone
and style of the film. The sympathetic idiot who provides much of
the humour looks more like a Chaplin creation, as does the mischievous
centenarian played so memorably by Marcel Simon. The seriousness
and scathing wit of Guitry's previous films are entirely absent here
and, as you watch this engaging little modern fable, you can't help
wondering what prompted the director to make it.
For a French cinema audience keen to put behind it the privations of
the 1940s,
Le Trésor de
Cantenac would have been a welcome piece of escapism. It is the
story of a world-weary baron who finds a fortune and uses it to revive
a derelict village. On his arrival in the village which bears his
name, the baron finds an unhappy place where nothing ever happens and
no one has a kind word to say about anyone else. The chance
discovery of a lost family fortune allows the baron to revitalise the
village and bring an end to years of disharmony between the
villagers. The film leaves us with the baron taking up the trade
of his illustrious forebear, a glass-blower, and the whole community
apparently united by bonhomie and mutual respect.
On the face of it, it's not the kind of scenario you'd expect Guitry to
be inclined to come up with, let alone turn into a full-length
film. Rather than tell the story he presumably wanted to tell,
Guitry resorts to the kind of allegorical subterfuge that was not
unknown amongst other filmmakers during the Occupation.
Le Trésor de Cantenac does a
fairly convincing job of passing itself off as an innocuous piece of
fun but its real purpose is for its author to firmly assert his
intention to continue in his chosen craft, unbeaten by the slew of
misfortunes that befell him in the latter half of the 1940s.
Branded a collaborator immediately after the Liberation, Guitry had
spent two months in prison. He did not receive a formal acquittal
until 1947, by which time his reputation was badly tarnished, and his
health and morale suffered as a result. When he started making
films again, a darker, more introspective Guitry is apparent, and when
he tackled comedy it was usually with a bitter edge. It may
have been a sudden awareness of his own mortality that led him to make
Le
Comédien (1948), a homage to his father, and in
Le Diable boiteux (1948) Guitry
likens himself to Talleyrand, the misunderstood historical personage
who devoted his life to serving France in the 18th and 19th centuries,
only to be remembered as a political turncoat. Likewise,
Le Trésor de Cantenac sees
Guitry playing a character, a philanthropic baron, who is clearly
intended to be a model of himself.
When we are introduced to the baron at the start of the film, he is a
worn-out and impoverished old man who knows he has outlived his
usefulness. Alone and forgotten, he is about to put a bullet in
his heart when he sees a picture of a village which awakens feelings of
nostalgia within him. Of course, the unhappy village of Cantenac
is intended to represent France, a nation that now lacks pride and
unity after being put through its most shameful and demoralising
decade. By playing the benevolent baron who changes an unhappy
village for the better, Guitry imagines himself as his country's
redeemer, proud in his intent to devote what remains of his life to the
glory of France. Just as the baron returns to the trade of his
forebears, so Guitry resumes the métier he was born for,
unscathed and seemingly unbothered by the slings and arrows of his
outrageous detractors. Guitry's self-confidence would soon turn out to be
justified. Some of his most ambitious and most
popular works were yet to come.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Sacha Guitry film:
La Poison (1951)
Film Synopsis
After losing everything he possesses, an old baron has just one wish
before he dies, to see the village of his forebears, Cantenac.
Many centuries ago, one of the baron's ancestors constructed a
magnificent castle in the village, creating a happy little community as
he did so. Since the Revolution, the castle is no more and the
inhabitants of the village live separate lives, contemptuous and
mistrustful of each other. The only thing of any significance to
happen in Cantenac these days is the death of one of the unhappy
villagers. On his arrival in the village, the baron meets a
hundred-year-old man who admits to being the custodian of a vast
treasure which belonged to the baron's noble forebears. It is the
baron who is now the rightful owner of the treasure, but rather than
keep it for himself he decides to use it for the benefit of the
villagers. His ambition to build a magnificent house brings
prosperity to Catnenac, ending the animosities and petty rivalries that
have endured for so long...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.