Film Review
By the time he came to direct
Un chapeau de paille d'Italie René
Clair had just four full-length films under his belt - three fantasy offerings
(
Paris qui dort,
Le Fantôme du
Moulin-Rouge and
Le Voyage
imaginaire) and one conventional melodrama (
La Proie du vent). Fairly
modest as this achievement was, Clair was already widely recognised as one
of the leading avant-garde figures in French cinema, a participant in the
so-called impressionist movement that included Abel Gance, Jean Epstein and
Marcel L'Herbier. For his fourth major cinematic offering, Clair took
a drastic step back from the stylistic and technical innovations of his preceding
films and contented himself with serving up an unashamed crowd-pleaser, a
light comedy adapted from a popular stage play of the early 1850s, written
by Eugène Labiche.
Although comedy had found its way into some of Clair's previous films - most
notably his anarchic short
Entr'acte
(1924) and his fantasy debut feature
Paris qui dort (1925), it wasn't
until he made
Un chapeau de paille d'Italie that the director found
he had a genuine flair for it, with the result that the bulk of his subsequent
oeuvre is comedy-oriented, his most notable successes being
Le Million (1931),
À nous la liberté
(1931) and
I Married a Witch
(1942). Assisted by Georges Lacombe (who would later become an impressive
film director in his own right), René Clair takes a somewhat wordy
theatrical piece and effortlessly transposes it into a ballet of pure visual
farce.
By time-shifting the date of the original play by almost half a century to
the mid-1890s, Clair's film proves to be a scurrilous satire on bourgeois
values that would have greatly amused French cinema audiences of the late
1920s with its cheerful mockery of the middleclass's obsession with appearances
and decorum. The destruction of a woman's immaculate straw hat becomes
a symbol of a marital infidelity which can never be put right, no matter
how much the hapless hero of the piece may try. It is the sheer futility
of Fadinard's mission to find a substitute hat and thereby save the reputations
of everyone involved in this fiasco that provides the film with much of its
humour.
The casting of Albert Préjean in the role of Fadinard was an inspired
choice and finally turned the thirty-four year-old actor into a major star
of French cinema. Clair had previously employed the actor on three
earlier films in minor roles but he recognised both his talent and his crowd-pulling
ability, securing his celebrity status with his next film
Sous les toits de Paris
(1930). Préjean's athleticism and flair for visual comedy are
exploited to the full in
Un chapeau de paille, imbuing it with something
of the manic dynamism found in the contemporary slapstick comedies from the
Keystone studios.
Whilst it may lack the originality and visual flair of Clair's more experimental
films of this period,
Un chapeau de paille d'Italie still rates as
one of his finest screen offerings, its unflagging sense of fun and merciless
lampooning of bourgeois attitudes making it arguably the most entertaining
entry in his impressive oeuvre. The film is certainly vastly superior
to the
1940s remake
which was directed by Maurice Cammage with scant verve and even less artistry.
Even with a comic actor of the prowess of Fernandel in the lead role
the later film fails to shine even half as brightly as René Clair's
superlative silent comedy.
© James Travers 2024
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next René Clair film:
Sous les toits de Paris (1930)
Film Synopsis
France, 1895. One fine day, a handsome young man named Fadinard is
on the way to his wedding when calamity strikes. His horse takes a
fancy to a woman's straw hat and can't resist taking a bite out of it.
It so happens that, at the time, the hat's owner is in the arms of a proud
military man, Lieutenant Tavernier. The latter is anxious to keep his
affair with his mistress Anaïs, a married woman, a secret, and fears
the worst may happen if she returns home without her straw hat. To avoid
a scandal Tavernier is impelled to call on Fadinard at his home and beg him
to give him a substitute hat to safeguard his mistress's honour. Seeing
that the officer means business Fadinard has no option but to set out at
once and find a hat to replace the one his horse has so thoughtlessly devoured.
He has more than Tavernier's wrath to fear if he fails in his quest.
What will his bride-to-be Hélène make of his latest escapade
if she ever finds out? Finding a new straw hat turns out to be the
least of Fadinard's worries...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.