Film Review
For all its superior design work and some breathtaking visuals
worthy of D.W. Griffith, Raymond Bernard's 1930 production of
Tarakanova still manages to look
like an obvious attempt to cash in on the success of previous films set in imperial Russia,
most notably Viktor Tourjansky's
Michel Strogoff (1926).
There had been a previous silent version of
the same story - a short made in 1910 by Pathé's Russian subsidiary - and Fyodor
Otsep and Mario Soldati would later direct a sound version in 1938, but
Bernard's film alone has the epic quality that the rambling story of
frustrated ambition and desire deserves. Even
though it is a minor work in his filmography, Bernard always maintained that it was his personal
favourite. It's a bizarre choice given
that the two films the director made prior to this -
Le Miracle des loups (1924) and
Le Joueur d'échecs (1927) - are superior in just about every
respect and are still highly thought of, whereas
Tarakanova,
a bloated melodrama, is virtually forgotten.
Raymond Bernard is not only one of French cinema's most
eclectic directors, he is also one of the most inconsistent, and his
career is pretty well defined by a continual seesawing between outright
masterpieces (
Les
Croix de bois,
Les Misérables,
Les
Otages) and mediocre crowdpleasers (
Marthe Richard, au service de la France,
La Belle de Cadix).
Bernard's undying fondness for
Tarakanova
can be taken as evidence of a poor faculty for self-criticism but it is equally testament to his
affection for his lead actress, Édith Jéhanne, who appeared in four
of his films, this being her most substantial role.
Bernard first met Jéhanne when she showed up whilst he
was shooting
Le
Secret de Rosette Lambert (1920), to visit her sister Sylvia
Grey. The director was so taken with the
18 year old that he gave her a part in his comedy
Triplepatte (1922) and later
cast her as the female lead in
Le
Joueur d'échecs.
The
same year, Jéhanne took her most famous role as the lead
heroine of G.W. Pabst's
Die Liebe
der Jeanne Ney (1927). Nothing more
is known about Jéhanne after she appeared in Léonce Perret's
Quand nous étions deux
(1930), her eighth film, although she is believed to have died not long afterwards.
In
Tarakanova, Édith
Jéhanne takes on a challenging double role in which she plays a princess who has renounced
the crown of Russia and a gypsy girl whose head is completely
turned when she falls for the lie that she will be the next Empress of
Russia. Not only does Jéhanne
succeed in delineating the two characters (they look identical but have
completely different personalities), she also has such a potent screen
presence that she eclipses every other member of the cast (even actors who have
considerably greater experience). There is a Garbo-like allure to
Jéhanne, innocence laced with a raw sensuality,
which, along with the surprising modernity of her performance, makes
her instantly engaging. Her tangible
presence and air of mystique is the one thing that holds
Tarakanova together,
preventing it from being just a succession of grand set-pieces with
barely enough narrative glue to keep it from falling apart.
The one member of the cast not to be completely outshone by
the divine Jéhanne is Paule Andral, a superb choice for the part
of Catherine the Great. Andral's charisma and imposing
physique make her a convincing despot, and whilst her character's
ruthlessness is shocking in a few scenes, these reveal as much female vulnerability
as paranoia in what is a fascinating character portrayal.
Let down by an inadequate script, the male characters fair pretty
badly, and there's little to distinguish the two
male leads, even though they are played by two leading lights of the silent
era. Olaf Fjord (cast as the romantic Count Orlof) was one of the biggest
stars of Scandinavian cinema (despite being of Austrian origin) but he is
wasted here in a role that is poorly developed and pretty unconvincing.
The other principal male character Count
Chouvalof also fails to have much impact, despite being played by the
legendary German actor Rudolf Klein-Rogge, who is best known for his frequent
collaborations with Fritz Lang - most famously as the inventor Rotwang
in
Metropolis
(1927) and the criminal mastermind in
Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler (1922).
One area where the film cannot be faulted is its
production design, which showcases French cinema of the late 1920s at its most
pictorially extravagant, with production values that could rival any
Hollywood superproductions of the time. Jean
Perrier's cavernous and highly detailed sets positively reek with the
excessive grandeur of Imperial Russia, as do the costumes supplied by Boris Bilinsky, a
prominent costume designer of the period who was most closely associated with
Albatros, a company that specialised in prestigious productions such as
Jean Epstein's
Le Lion des Mogols (1924).
Tarakanova may suffer
from a tatty plot, but the design is anything but tatty. From the first shot to the last,
the film looks stunning, helped by Jules Kruger's artful
cinematography, which more than plays its part in transporting us to
Russia in the mid-18th century.
The abrupt incursion of sound into cinema in the
late 1920s had a fairly disastrous impact on several films, and
Tarakanova was one notable casualty.
By 1929, silent cinema was pretty well dead in the water, so to minimise the likelihood of
Tarakanova
being an expensive flop its producers took the decision to delay its
release by a year, to give time for a sound track to be created and bolted onto
the film. A complete dub was out of the
question, so the soundtrack consists only of crude sound effects,
extracts of classical music and a specially written song for the heroine.
This song,
la
Chanson de la bohémienne, was
composed by André Roubard with lyrics by Bernard - the two would
work closely together on the director's next film (his first sound feature)
Faubourg Montmartre (1931).
Tarakanova
had its premiere at the Théâtre Pigalle on 3rd
June 1930, and was released in September of that year, to a decidedly
lukewarm reception.
Marred by a mediocre script, uneven pacing and a general
lack of coherence,
Tarakanova
is definitely a step down from Raymond Bernard's previous
two historical films. However, its
director's flair for visual drama, whilst not sustained, does have an
impact in the film's grandest set pieces. The
highpoint of the film's first half is a battle sequence that is
ferocious in its intensity and proximity. Bernard
doesn't show us the conflict from a distance, he violently thrusts us bodily into the
heart of the battle, using the constantly moving subjective camera to make us feel
we are actually caught up in the fighting. In
the second part of the film there are some dazzling poetic interludes
which show the influence of Bernard's more artistically minded contemporaries
(Abel Gance, Jean Epstein, Marcel Lherbier).
The impressionistic device of superimposition is used to great
effect to draw us into the elated mood of the heroine as she contemplates her
accession to the throne of Russia via a spectacular montage sequence.
Flawed though it is,
Tarakanova has its moments of
brilliance and with its bravura design it exemplifies
the exalted ambitions of French filmmakers just before silent cinema
was violently usurped by its talkie cousin.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Raymond Bernard film:
Les Croix de bois (1932)