Film Review
As his career as an actor began to wane in the late 1930s,
despite notable appearances in
Le Crime de Monsieur Lange (1936) and
Gueule d'amour (1937),
René Lefèvre turned to writing and had an immediate success with his
first novel,
Les Musiciens du ciel,
published by Gallimard in 1938. When this book made it to the big
screen a year later, Lefèvre was the natural person to play the
main protagonist, although by this time his star as an actor was very
much in the descendent. He had to be content with third billing,
beneath the box office draws Michèle Morgan and Michel Simon,
not that this prevented him from giving what is easily one of the finest performances
of his career.
On paper,
Les Musiciens du ciel
sounds like a typical homespun 1930s melodrama, and the fact that it
champions the work of the Salvation Army may lead you to expect a dry,
moralising piece that is suitable only for old ladies in crinoline and
Christian fundamentalists. Nothing could be further from the
truth. Far from being a tedious Bible bashing rant, the film is a
gently compassionate, true-to-life account of one man's redemption
through the kindness of others. It hardly matters that the person
who brings him back onto the straight and narrow is a dedicated
Salvation Army officer. What matters is that someone recognises
the good that it is within him and helps him to find a better, more
fulfilled life, in the service of others.
Georges Lacombe directs the film with his customary flair and respect
for character, getting the best from his talented actors and avoiding
the sentimental death-traps that a lesser director would easily stumble
into. In one of her less glamorous roles, Michèle Morgan
brings a striking natural quality to her performance, which is in
perfect sympathy with René Lefèvre's quietly understated
portrayal of a man struggling to grasp his true identity in a morally
vacuous world. The biggest surprising on the acting front is
Michel Simon, who enthrals in every one of his scenes, exuding so much
warmth and compassion that you can scarcely watch him with a dry
eye. Anchored in the realm of genuine human feeling rather than a
tacky synthetic substitute,
Les
Musiciens du ciel is a film that both captivates and inspires
with its lowkey authenticity.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Georges Lacombe film:
Le Dernier des six (1941)
Film Synopsis
In Paris, Victor makes a dishonest living as a petty criminal.
When his partner in crime is arrested for manufacturing forged coins,
Victor begins begging on the street, pretending he is blind.
Lieutenant Saulnier, a young woman officer in the Salvation Army, takes
pity on him and invites him back to her lodgings for a meal.
Saulnier soon sees through Victor's ruse and shames him by introducing
him to a real blind man. Under Saulnier's kindly influence,
Victor becomes a reformed character and decides to join the Salvation
Army himself. His faith is shaken when his benefactor succumbs to
an illness that threatens her life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.