Film Review
It was with his second play,
Topaze,
that Marcel Pagnol made his name as a playwright. First performed
in Paris in October 1928, the play was an instant success and is among
Pagnol's best known works, with no fewer than nine film adaptations
having been made to date. It was Pagnol's dissatisfaction with
the first screen version, directed by Louis Gasnier in 1933 and
starring Louis Jouvet, that led him to direct his own film adaptation
three years later for his recently created film production
company. Fifteen years on, Pagnol would adapt the play for cinema
a second time, with the popular comic actor Fernandel roped in to play
the lead role.
In Pagnol's famously consistent oeuvre,
Topaze stands out on account of its
subject matter and surprisingly bleak assessment of human nature.
There are rogues in most of Pagnol's films, but in this early play it
is the rogues who predominate - worse, a sympathetic, seemingly
incorruptible individual ends up as the worst rogue of all! An
unashamed anti-capitalist satire,
Topaze
is amusing, even hilarious in places, but it has a very bitter taste to
it, and, of all Pagnol's plays, it is the one that has stood the test
of time best. It is as relevant today as it was in the mid-1930s,
at the height of the Great Depression, and it is this timeless quality
(stemming from the immutability of human nature) that makes it such an
enduring success.
When he attempted his first film adaptation of
Topaze, Pagnol was still learning
his craft as a filmmaker, so the end result can hardly be described as
a polished piece of cinema. The film's imperfections are however
made up for by the quality of the script and a superb, totally
enthralling central performance from Alexandre Arnaudy, whose portrayal
of Topaze is probably the best cinema has given us so far.
Arnaudy's transformation from modest, sweetly naive schoolmaster to
rampant capitalist is shocking and we hardly recognise the pig-faced
moneygrubber that Topaze becomes in the film's chilling final
scenes. This is Pagnol at his most cynical and unforgiving -
quite a revelation for those who know him only through his gentle
Provençal dramas.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Marcel Pagnol film:
Regain (1937)
Film Synopsis
A modest teacher in a boys' school, Topaze does his utmost to instil in
his pupils his creed that money can never buy happiness. His
naivety makes him the butt of his boys' jokes and irritates his
headmaster, who reprimands him for not giving higher marks to the
pupils of the school's more affluent patrons. When he learns that
Topaze has amorous designs on his daughter, the headmaster dismisses
him in an instant. The unfortunate teacher has no choice but to
give private lessons to one of his former pupils. The boy's aunt,
Suzy Courtois, introduces him to a town councillor, Régis
Castel-Bénac, who offers him a generous income in return for his
assistance in certain business activities. Topaze sees nothing
wrong in the arrangement and gladly accepts the offer. It isn't
long before the ex-schoolteacher realises he is being used to front
Castel-Bénac's barely legal business deals. But by this
time he has acquired a taste for wealth and seizes the opportunity to
make himself a very successful businessman...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.