Film Review
Jean Epstein personified, perhaps more than any filmmaker of his
generation, the extreme dichotomy that ran through the first few
decades of cinema. Epstein was first and foremost an
experimentalist, one of the avant-garde pioneers of the seventh art who
revelled in the opportunities for artistic expression that the new
medium of the moving image offered. But he was also acutely aware
of the fact that cinema was destined to be the next medium of mass
entertainment, and the prospect that his films would be seen by
thousands, if not millions of people around the world excited him
greatly. With the line of demarcation between the avant-garde
innovators and commercially minded exploiters now clearly established,
Epstein was virtually unique in that he had a foot in each camp, and
this uncomfortable duality runs through much of his oeuvre.
All this could explain why, when Epstein set up his own film production
company in 1925, after several successful years working for Alexandre
Kamenka's Film Albatros, he began by making a crowdpleasing period romp
rather than some groundbreaking artistic oddity. Epstein's
adaptation of George Sand's novel
Mauprat
is as conventional-looking as any other film he made and has nothing to
distinguish it from the other populist fare he made for Albatros,
including
Le Lion des Mogols
(1924) and
Les Aventures de Robert
Macaire (1925). It's a respectable mainstream mix of
adventure, intrigue and romance, attractively photographed by Albert
Duverger and with impressively authentic period sets supplied by
Epstein's faithful designer Pierre Kefer. Epstein's flair for
innovation is, however, conspicuous by its absence, and even his
trademark superimposition is used sparingly.
Mauprat is a film that was clearly
intended to make money for Epstein's fledgling company, not to extend
the boundaries of cinematic expression.
Mauprat may not be Jean
Epstein's most interesting film but it is not without charm. The
location sequences are endowed with a special lyrical quality and
possess that distinctive romanticism that illuminates much of Epstein's
work. (It's worth mentioning,
en
passant, that the main location, the little town of
Sainte-Sévère-sur-Indre, would later become famous as the
setting for Jacques Tati's
Jour de fête). The
superbly edited sequence near the start of the film where Edmée loses her way in
the woods palpably conveys the heroine's anxiety and anticipation over
what may lie in store for her as she strays into uncharted territory.
The landscape can be either welcoming or intensely forbidding,
depending on the camera angles and lighting. Close-ups
superimposed on wider shots are used repeatedly by Epstein to stress
the heightened emotional states of his protagonists, an active mind
trapped in a feeble, unresponsive body. There are none of the
grand stylistic flourishes that ignite Epstein's subsequent
masterpieces; instead, the director surrenders himself to the
exigencies of his plot and the expectations of his audience.
Conventional as the film appears to be, there is within it a streak of
subversiveness if you care to look for it. To what extent this is
due to Epstein's assistant Luis Buñuel, here taking his first
film credit (and briefly appearing on screen as an extra), is hard to
say, but there is just a
soupçon
of Buñuellian mischief playing beneath the surface. Notice
how the male-female principal roles are subtly reversed, so that Sandra
Milovanoff's Edmée de Mauprat becomes the proactive player in
the drama, making Nino Constantini's 'enfant sauvage' Bernard look like
a slightly run-down automaton. Whereas Bernard often appears weak and effeminate
(in some scenes you could easily mistake him for a woman), Edmée
is consistently strong and decisive. The film's proto-feminist
slant doubtless owes something to Sand's original novel (reputed to be
a reworking of
Beauty and the Beast)
but by 'butching up' the heroine and making the hero a spineless
non-entity Epstein leaves us in no doubt as to whom he considers the
stronger sex. Or maybe he is just being teasingly post-modern.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Epstein film:
Six et demi, onze (1927)
Film Synopsis
Hubert de Mauprat is an ageing French nobleman who leads a quiet life
at his castle of Saint Sévère in the company of his
daughter Edmée. The latter is engaged to the Viscount de
la Marche, who is acting on the king's orders to drive bandits from the
region. Whilst out riding in the woods one day Edmée loses
her way and ends up being captured by her father's wicked younger
brother, Tristan, and his gang of outlaws. Edmée escapes
with the help of a member of the gang who introduces himself as her
cousin Bernard. In return for saving Edmée's life and
honour Bernard extracts from her a promise to marry him. When he
is reunited with his daughter Hubert reveals that Bernard was an
orphan who was kidnapped in infancy by his younger brother and brought
up as an outlaw. To repay the debt he owes his nephew, the old
man offers him a place in his castle and attempts to make a gentleman
of him. Bernard proves not to be the easiest of men to civilise
and his mood worsens when he realises that Edmée has no
intention of honouring the promise she made to him. During a fox
hunt, Edmée sustains a near-fatal gunshot wound. The
uncouth, socially inept Bernard is the obvious culprit and before he
knows it he is on trial, charged with trying to murder his benefactor's
daughter...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.