Film Review
Once one of the shining lights of the French avant-garde, Marcel
L'Herbier spent most of the 1930s turning out dreary melodramas that
frankly look pretty dismal when compared with his early cinematic
achievements. From its bombastic opening,
Les Hommes nouveaux looks like
another pre-WWII propaganda piece glorifying the French military,
similar in tone to L'Herbier's other war films of this era,
Veille d'armes (1935) and
La Porte du large (1936).
Having spent a good thirty minutes convincing us that French
imperialism is the best thing that ever happened to Morocco the film
gets off its high horse and slumps into a rather bland and formulaic
melodrama, competently made but nothing to get excited about.
Les Hommes nouveaux is adapted
from a novel of the same title by Claude Farrère and has one
claim to fame: it was the last film in which Natalie Paley appeared
before she suddenly (and inexplicably) gave up her promising screen
career. A member of the Russian aristocracy, Paley settled in
France in the 1920s having fled the Bolshevik Revolution and promptly
became one of the queens of Café Society. It was Luchino
Visconti who persuaded her to make a career as an actress and
Jean Cocteau gave her her first screen role in
Le Sang d'un poète
(1930). This led Marcel L'Herbier to cast her in
L'Épervier (1933), and
later, after a short spell in Hollywood, she took the lead in
L'Herbier's
Les Hommes nouveaux,
playing a character whose personal history was not too far removed from
her own. The film's popularity gave a massive boost to Paley's
celebrity but, bizarrely, she chose to turn her back on the cinema.
Natalie Paley was hardly a great actress but she had a mystique and
screen presence, which L'Herbier and his
cinematographer Robert Lefebvre exploited to the full in this
film. Her casting alongside Harry Baur, the most highly regarded French
actor of the time, was fortuitous as they make a wonderfully effective
combination - she the cool but sensual ice princess, he the cynical but
emotionally unstable king of commerce. Baur's scenes with Paley
are the only ones in the film that resonate with truth and feeling;
everything feels like arid plodding, badly dated by the jingoistic
posturing and jarring mismatch between the location and studio
sequences. Some artistic lighting and fluid camerawork prevent
the film from being as dated as it might have been, but like
most of L'Herbier's films from this decade, there's a distinct lack of
bravado in the mise-en-scène. Whatever
artistic merits the film has are mostly confined to Harry Baur's
performance, which provides an exquisite and ironic study in human frailty.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Marcel L'Herbier film:
Forfaiture (1937)
Film Synopsis
Jules Bourron is a French businessman who made his fortune in Morocco
between 1910 and 1920. In Casablanca, he meets Christiane, an
aristocratic widow fallen on hard times, and immediately loses his
heart to her. With few other options open to her, Christiane
accepts Bourron's proposal of marriage, as much for her brother's sake
as her own. Some years before her marriage, Christiane had a
short-lived but passionate affair with an officer in the French army,
Henri de Chassagnes. When Bourron hears of this he sees a way of
using it to his advantage to conclude a difficult business deal.
Christiane is appalled when learns the truth and insists that her
marriage to Bourron is over...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.