Film Review
In 1944, Jean Renoir followed his well-honed propaganda piece
This Land Is Mine with a film
that could hardly be more different but which offers a similar
heart-felt hymn to the freedom of the individual.
The Southerner, a boldly
naturalistic adaptation of George Sessions Perry's 1941 novel
Hold Autumn in Your Hand, is
arguably the finest of Renoir's six American films, the one that is
most recognisably the work of the fearless auteur who had previously
crafted such masterpieces as
Boudu sauvé des eaux
(1932) and
La Règle du jeu
(1939). It is an unusual film for Renoir, the only one of his
films (other than his subsequent
The
River) which champions family life. It marks a
tentative return to the realism of Renoir's early sound films, albeit
one viewed through the prism of American melodrama.
The Southerner is the most
American of Jean Renoir's films but it is atypical of American cinema
at the time because of its uncompromising depiction of the hardships
endured by ordinary American citizens. Renoir does not attempt to
ennoble impoverished workers as John Ford had done with his
The Grapes of Wrath (1940); he
depicts them as honestly as he can, as ordinary folk fighting an uphill
battle against misfortune and malice. The director's
flair for visual poetry (most apparent in the almost dream-like possum hunt) and
his habitual optimism take the edge of what might have
been a bleak drama. The film's parochial
subject matter and trenchant realism were against the spirit of the
time but this did not prevent it from being a moderate success.
It earned Renoir his one Oscar nomination for Best Director and took
the Best Film award at the 1946 Venice Film Festival.
It is the simplicity of Perry's story that first attracted Renoir to
it. There is no plot as such, just a series of episodes in the
life of a young family struggling to survive as the father doggedly
(and recklessly) tries his hand at being a solo farmer. The
characters are sympathetically drawn and authentically played by a
talented ensemble, with Zachary Scott and Betty Field both at their
best as the free spirited farmer and his supportive wife. Beulah
Bondi provides entertainment value as the pathologically tetchy
grandmother, whose endlessly whinging never lets us forget the extreme
hardship endured by the central characters. J. Carrol Naish
manages to bring an undeniable pathos to his portrayal of the brutally
misanthropic neighbour Devers, a rogue with more than a touch of Boudu
about him. Renoir's compassion for his fellow man, irrespective
of their moral makeup, is brought out through this gallery of arresting
character portrayals.
It was whilst making
The Southerner
that Jean Renoir fell in love with America and came to regard it as his
new home. On becoming an American citizen, he later remarked, he
felt that he had been born a second time. This newfound sense of
belonging is powerfully felt in
The
Southerner, and in Sam Tucker's struggle to make something of
his dusty strip of Texas land there is a glimmer of a
self-portrait. Like Sam, Renoir would have his fair share of
setbacks and his next two American films -
The Diary of a Chambermaid
(1946) and
The Woman on the Beach
(1947) - would be flops. Renoir's American dream ended in bitter
disillusionment and ten tears after he made his fondest tribute to the
American way of life he was back in France, returning to the Land of
the Free only after he had retired from filmmaking altogether.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Renoir film:
The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946)
Film Synopsis
Sam Tucker is a young migrant worker who scrapes a living toiling for
others on the cotton fields of Texas. When his uncle, another
cotton picker, dies from sunstroke, Sam decides to go it alone and
invest his meagre savings in a smallholding, hoping to strike it rich
with a bumper cotton harvest. With the help of his wife Nona,
children Jot and Daisy and cantankerous Granny, Sam soon converts the
derelict shack that goes with his land into a habitable dwelling as he
sows his first field of cotton. A hermit-like neighbour, Devers,
grudgingly allows Sam to take water from his well but refuses to give
him milk when Jot falls ill. Harmie, the town grocer, comes to
the family's rescue, sending them a cow when he marries Sam's widowed
mother. Devers and Sam put an end to their feud when the latter
catches a legendary catfish and allows his neighbour to take the
credit. Just as Sam's dreams of making it as an independent
farmer are about to be fulfilled disaster strikes...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.