Apart from its glib insights into the Folies-Bergères
circa 1930 and a few half-decent musical numbers, there isn't
much to commend this tediously lacklustre and hopelessly unfocused
melodrama. Polish-born director Alexandre Ryder deserves his
place in obscurity if Mirages
(a.k.a. Si tu m'aimes) is
anything to go by. How could a film that boasts the combined
talents of no fewer than three acting legends - Arletty, Michel Simon
and Jean-Louis Barrault - fail so spectacularly to take off?
Ryder's totally uninspired direction, combined with a sloppily cobbled
together script that is unbelievably pedestrian, make this one of the
dullest films of the decade, and without the musical numbers to liven
it up it would have been totally unbearable. Arletty and Simon
would be far better served by their combined appearances in Circonstances atténuantes
(1939) and Fric-Frac (1939), whilst
Barrault and Arletty would secure a prominent place in film history via
their unforgettable pairing in Marcel Carné's Les Enfants du paradis (1945).
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
With the help of her friends, Jeanne succeeds in getting herself into
Paris's top night spot, the Folies-Bergères, and within no time
she is a star of the music hall. Meanwhile, her fiancé
Pierre has left to work in Algeria, expecting that Jeanne will one day
join him. In the end, Jeanne cannot give up her life of stardom
and abandons Pierre for the sake of her career.
Cast:Arletty (Arlette),
Jeanne Aubert (Jeanne Dumont),
Michel Simon (Michel),
Jean-Louis Barrault (Pierre Bonvais),
Pierre Nay (Charles),
Nicole Vattier (Lucie),
Tirmont (Le ténor),
Paul Derval (Le directeur),
Triel (Le régisseur),
Marcel Mouloudji (Groom),
Georges Bastia,
Henry Bonvallet,
Henri Bry,
Anthony Gildès,
Jean Granier,
Walter Joseph,
Palmyre Levasseur,
Yvonne Yma
Country: France
Language: French
Support: Black and White
Runtime: 98 min
The history of French cinema
From its birth in 1895, cinema has been an essential part of French culture. Now it is one of the most dynamic, versatile and important of the arts in France.