Film Review
Eugène Sue's popular novel
Les
Mystères de Paris, first published in instalments in
1842, has been honoured with no fewer than eleven screen adaptations to
date, the best known being André Hunebelle's lively
swashbuckler version of
1962 with Jean Marais in the lead role of Rudolphe. As
entertaining as Hunebelle's film is, it is somewhat out-classed by an
earlier version directed by Jacques de Baroncelli during the dark days
of the Occupation, which has (as you might expect) a much darker tone
and is much closer in spirit to Sue's tale of dark intrigue in the
depraved lower depths of 19th century Paris.
With over eighty films to his name, Jacques de Baroncelli was one of
the most prolific of all French film directors and enjoyed considerable
success with crowd-pleasers spanning a wide range of genres.
Les Mystères de Paris is one
of his most lavish films, its opulent production values belying the
period of extreme hardship in which the film was made. Filmed
entirely at the famous Victorine Studios in Nice, it made effective use
of permanent exterior sets that offered the most authentic
reconstruction of 19th century Paris. With Léonce-Henri
Burel in charge of the cinematography (having brought considerable
artistry to other films with such noted directors as Abel Gance),
Les Mystères de Paris could
rival any Hollywood blockbuster of the time, impressing both with its
flamboyant exteriors and its intensely oppressive interiors, a stark
contrast which pointedly evokes the dramatic split in Parisian
society in the 1800s.
The film's main strength is its impressive cast, made up of
accomplished character actors and stars of the French stage.
Taking the lead is a dashing Marcel Herrand, who would soon earn a
place in film posterity with his portrayal of the criminal Lacenaire in
Marcel Carné's
Les Enfants du paradis (1945).
Alexandre Rignault, Lucien Coëdel and Roland Toutain all provide
strong supporting performances and the only female member of the cast
to excel is Germaine Kerjean, superbly vile as the unutterably evil hag
La Chouette, who spends almost the entire film stabbing the rest of the
cast in the back.
Made up to resemble something that would be more at home in a German
expressionist horror film, Kerjean gives decrepit, one-eyed
psychopathic harridans a bad name before her character meets a
spectacularly grim end. For what seems to have been aimed at a
family audience, the film is surprisingly violent, with multiple
stabbings, shootings, strangulations, drownings and other gruesome
methods of dispatch offering a veritable banquet for the morbidly
inclined. It probably never occurred to the German censor that
the film might have been claimed as a training film for the French
Resistance...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
France, 1830. In the guise of a down-and-out named Rodolphe, the
Grand-Duke of Gérolstein enters the lower depths of Paris in
search of his missing daughter Fleur de Marie, the fruit of one of his
erstwhile amorous adventures. Before he can rescue Fleur, she is
abducted by a deformed hag, La Chouette, acting on the orders of a
jealous mistress, the countess MacGregor. The girl is imprisoned
in Saint-Lazare but is finally rescued by the duke when he obtains the
proof that she is indeed his daughter.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.