Film Review
Such was the adverse public and critical reaction to his first sound
films
La Petite Lise (1930)
and
Daïnah la métisse
(1931) that director Jean Grémillon became virtually
unemployable in his native France and had no other option than to leave
his country if he was to continue his filmmaking career. Having
fulfilled a commission to direct
Dolorossa
(1934) in Spain, he took up residence in Berlin and fell in with Raoul
Ploquin, an important figure at the UFA film studios who was
responsible for the production of French-language films. It was
Ploquin who gave Grémillon his first assignment at UFA, to
direct
Valse royale, a French
version of the German film
Königswalzer
(1935). The latter was directed by Herbert Maisch and featured
the actor Curd Jürgens in his first screen role; it was subsequent
remade (with the same title) in 1955 by Viktor Tourjansky.
Ploquin was evidently so impressed by Grémillon's work that not
only did he immediately invite him to direct another comedy in the same
vein,
Pattes de mouches
(1936), but he also went out of his way to provide him with the moral
and material support to take on more ambitious projects,
Gueule
d'amour (1937) and
L'Étrange Monsieur Victor
(1937). It was these last two films that gave Grémillon
his first major commercial successes, establishing his reputation as a
bankable filmmaker and buying him his return ticket back to France.
Valse royale is a rarity in
Grémillon's oeuvre - a period musical comedy. Such films
were enormously popular in France and Germany in the mid-1930s, but
they seem to be a world away from Grémillon's doom-laden
poetic-realist melodramas, exemplified by
Gueule d'amour (1937) and
Remorques
(1941). Yet, given that Grémillon started out as a
musician, it seems odd that he had so little affinity for the musical
genre. It was, after all, by providing accompaniment to silent
films in his youth that Grémillon first developed his interest
in cinema. Whilst
Valse royale
is competently directed and has many appealing qualities, it lacks the
auteur signature that is so readily apparent in Grémillon's
other great films. No wonder the film is all but forgotten,
little more than a curiosity piece for the most ardent of cinephiles.
Valse royale's one main virtue
(after Grémillon's intermittent stylistic flourishes) is its
distinguished cast, which is headed by two of the most well-known
French actors of the period - Henri Garat and Renée
Saint-Cyr. Both Garat and Saint-Cyr had immense public appeal
around this time, and the former's talents as a popular chansonnier are
exploited (perhaps a little too eagerly) by this film with its slightly
incongruous musical numbers. Garat may not have been the greatest
actor of his era, but what he lacks in acting prowess he more than
makes up for in screen presence, and it is not hard to see why he was
such a popular performer in his day. By contrast, Renée
Saint-Cyr not only had star quality, she was also a supremely capable
actress, as she admirably demonstrates in this film, playing against
the rather forced comedy to give a convincing portrayal of a proud
young woman who is torn between her misguided sense of duty and her
amorous desires.
The supporting cast includes some equally capable (albeit less
well-known) performers. In one of her first roles, Mila
Parély positively shines as Saint-Cyr's troublesome younger
sister - you can see why this vivacious young actress would soon be
receiving offers of work from the likes of Jean Cocteau, Jean Renoir
and Julien Duvivier. Most of the other performances are of a more
vaudevillian hue, some enjoyably so, others outrageously over the
top. Adrien Le Gallo is one of the few cast members to strike the
right balance between sobriety and outright whimsy as the mercurial
King of Bavaria; Gustave Gallet, by contrast, tries just a little too
hard to outstage all and sundry as the self-important royal caterer
Tomasoni, although he does deliver the biggest laughs.
Whilst Grémillon shows a visible lack of engagement with the
subject of the film (a lightweight farce set on the eve of the wedding
of Franz Joseph of Austria and Elisabeth of Bavria), he does manage to
bring his own visual flair to the grand set-pieces, which are far more
interesting than the homespun plot and faintly absurd characters.
The royal ball which forms the centrepiece of the film is photographed
with Grémillon's customary visual bravura, the slick montage of
ceiling shots, elegant tracking shots and use of low and high camera
angles recreating something of the intoxicating vitality of the famous
dance sequence in the director's earlier
Maldone (1928).
As in many of Jean Grémillon's films, it is the exterior
sequences which are most striking, and here they carry something of the
raw impressionistic quality that we find in Jean Renoir's
Partie de campagne
(1936). By contrast, the interior scenes feel airless and stagy,
an impression that is reinforced by the excessive theatricality of some
of the performances. Jean Grémillon may have been grateful
for the work but you can sense that his heart isn't in this one - the
film has something of the dead, strained feeling that pervades
Hitchcock's
Waltzes from Vienna (1934), a
comparable sorry mismatch of director and genre. It is
probably correct to regard
Valse
royale as one of Jean Grémillon's lesser films, but that
does not mean it deserves to be forgotten. A minor film it may
be, but without it Grémillon would not have been able to go on
to make the great masterpieces for which he is now remembered.
It was his passport to posterity.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Grémillon film:
Gueule d'amour (1937)
Film Synopsis
In 1852, the young Austrian emperor Franz Joseph persuades his friend,
Count Michel de Thalberg, to act as a go-between in his love affair
with the Bavarian duchess Elisabeth. Not long after his arrival
in Munch, Thalberg has an embarrassing encounter in a public garden
with an attractive young woman. The innocent incident is
misinterpreted by a passer-by who, recognising the woman as the
youngest daughter of Ludwig Tomasini, a highly respected caterer,
persuades her father that she should marry the man who flirted with her
to avoid a scandal. As luck would have it, Thalberg meets up with
Tomasini's older daughter, Thérèse, at a state ball
hosted by King Max of Bavaria. Thérèse is reluctant
to dance, but joins in the festivities once she has secured a promise
from the king to find the man who has disgraced her sister. Her
spirits lightened, Thérèse dances with Thalberg, and
within no time the two realise that they are in love. How will
Thérèse react when she discovers that the man she has
lost her heart to is none other than the scoundrel who robbed her
younger sister of her virtue?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.