Film Review
It is widely acknowledged that American film noir of the 1940s and '50s
had its origins in German expressionism of the 1920s, but what is less
well understood is how the aesthetic developed in French crime dramas
of the 1930s. Films such as Jean Renoir's
La
Nuit du carrefour (1932), Maurice Tourneur's
Justin de Marseille (1935) and
Pierre Chenal's
Le Dernier tournant (1939) (to
name just three) show how the familiar film noir motifs came together,
presaging the classic doom-laden dramas that were to dominate the
American B-movie of the 1940s. Augusto Genina's
Les Amours de minuit is another
important example of French proto-film noir, one of the earliest, made
shortly after the transition from silent to sound cinema. With
its seedy settings and imaginative use of lighting to create a stifling
mood of oppression and predestination, the film is astonishingly near
to the American film noir classics that we know and love.
Today, Augusto Genina is best remembered for his silent Louise Brooks
vehicle
Prix de beauté (1930),
which was scripted by two other notable filmmakers of this era,
René Clair and Georg Wilhelm Pabst. Heavily influenced by
German expressionism, many of Genina's films employ noir-like
stylisation (particularly high contrast lighting) to create tension,
atmosphere and an aura of fatalism.
Les Amours de minuit is a
particularly good example of this, using Genina's recurring train motif
to symbolise the unstoppable forces that are propelling the
protagonists to their inescapable destinies - just as Jean Renoir would
do (even more effectively) in his subsequent
La
Bête humaine (1938).
Jean Renoir is not the only prominent filmmaker who may have been
influenced by this film.
Les
Amours de minuit has a distinctly Hitchcockian feel to it
throughout and could easily be mistaken for one of Hitchcock's middle
period crime films. The film begins with a scene (two men meeting
in a railway compartment, one an innocent, the other an obvious
bounder) which appears to be a carbon copy of the scene in
Strangers in a Train (1951) in
which Robert Walker tries to corrupt Farley Granger, and has a similar
homoerotic charge. Equally, the sequence near the end of the film
where the main protagonist frantically runs to catch the train that
will save him from ruin would not be out of place in a Hitchcock
suspense thriller. And, to cap it all, the heroine is the
quintessential Hitchcock blonde - desirable, duplicitous and possibly
doomed! It is also interesting to note that cast in a minor role
is a young Jacques Prévert, who would in a few years' time
become one of the architects of the French poetic realist tradition
through his collaborations as a screenwriter with director Marcel
Carné. There is much in
Les
Amours de minuit to evoke Carné's
Le
Quai des brumes (1938) and
Hôtel
du Nord (1938).
Although Augusto Genina receives the sole directing credit on the film,
he actually directed it in close collaboration with Marc
Allégret, an aspiring young filmmaker who had previously made a
documentary -
Voyage au Congo (1927)
- with his lover and mentor André Gide, and a few short films,
including
La Meilleure bobone (1930) with
Fernandel. Allégret's younger brother Yves also worked on
the film, as an assistant - it would be almost two decades before Yves
Allégret would emerge from his brother's shadow and find acclaim
with his intensely gloomy melodramas
Dédée
d'Anvers (1948) and
Une si jolie petite plage
(1949). The film was produced by Pierre Braunberger, who regarded
Marc Allégret as a protégé and gave him not only
moral support but also the space to develop his own artistic style in
his early films. Braunberger was not just a successful
businessman (he was head of the Cinéma du Panthéon for
sixty years and produced films for just as long), he was always an avid
supporter of new talent - evidenced by his willingness to finance the
early films of the French New Wave directors François Truffaut
and Jean-Luc Godard.
Les Amours de minuit was made
in parallel with a German version entitled
Mitternachtsliebe, which was twenty
minutes shorter and was directed by Augusto Genina and Carl
Froelich. Both films have the same cast, with one notable
esxception: the part of the central villain is played by Jacques
Varennes in the French film and by Hans Adalbert Schlettow in the
German version. The lead male role in both films was taken by
Pierre Batcheff, a Russian born actor who came to prominence in the
silent era and achieved immortality as the male protagonist in Luis
Buñuel's
Un Chien Andalou (1929).
Batcheff had the Valentino good looks and everyman charm to have been a
major film star of the 1930s, but his promising career was tragically
cut short when, aged 30. he took a fatal overdose of Veronal, shortly
after starring in Rex Ingram's disastrous final film
Baroud (1933).
Batcheff appeared in several important films of the 1920s, from Raymond
Bernard's
Le Joueur d'échecs
(1927) to Abel Gance's
Napoléon (1927), but no
film reveals what a loss to cinema his premature death was more than
Les Amours de minuit.
The film's other two main roles are played by Jacques Varennes and
Danièle Parola, who are equally well suited for the parts of the
utterly loathsome villain Gaston and the seductive cabaret performer
Georgette Lajoie. Varennes, a character actor of remarkable
versatility, is at his best when he is playing shady rogues and here he
makes a perfect contrast with Batcheff's guileless juvenile - their
first meeting on the train is superbly well played and effectively
establishes the ambiguous relationship between their two characters
(who turn out to be far similar than we might think). Whilst not
a great actress, Danièle Parola is a delight to watch,
particularly in the raunchy cabaret scenes, which are strikingly
similar to those in Josef von Sternberg's
Der Blaue Engel (1930), with
Parola every bit as sensual and alluring as Marlene Dietrich in her
tight corset and black stockings.
Les Amours de minuit may be
virtually forgotten today but it clearly represents an important stage
in the evolution of classic film noir from the stylised fantasies of
German expressionism to the cordite-scented crime dramas that
best characterise full-blown American film noir. The plot may be
a tad pedestrian by today's standards and the characters little more
than roughly hewn archetypes, but such is the artistic flair with which
Augusto Genina and Marc Allégret approach it that the film can
hardly fail to please. Admittedly, the ending feels like a lazy
concession to early 1930s melodrama, but in every other respect this is
film noir pure and simple, and if you are a dedicated Hitchcock aficionado, the
sense of
déja-vu is
overwhelming, if not scary.
© James Travers 2012
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