Film Review
Voici le temps des assassins
is the darkest and most cynical of Julien Duvivier's films, an even
more pessimistic assessment of human nature than his previous
noir-tinted dramas
Panique (1947) and
L'Affaire Maurizius
(1954). Duvivier's bitter misogynism, first evident in
La
Belle équipe (1936) and
Un
carnet de bal (1937), receives its fullest expression in
this film, which the critic François Truffaut cited as the
director's best work. The film bears more than a passing
resemblance to Yves Allégret's equally gloomy
Manèges
(1950), although Duvivier succeeds in making his femme fatale a far
deadlier creature, a calculating monster in the form of an angelic
Danièle Delorme. The film and its inappropriately
jaunty theme song take their title from
Illuminations, a collection of
poems by the great French poet Arthur Rimbaud, specifically the last
line of
Matinée d'ivresse.
Voici le temps des assassins
was the last of seven films that Julien Duvivier made with the actor
Jean Gabin. Their most recent collaboration prior to this had
been
The Impostor (1944),
made during the director's brief spell in Hollywood during the war, and
before this they had worked together on a number of films that are now
considered classics of French cinema:
Maria Chapdelaine (1934),
La Bandera (1935),
Pépé-le-Moko
(1937) and
La Belle équipe
(1936). As in most of his films for Duvivier, Gabin once again
plays the noble innocent who is lured to his doom by a woman of
questionable morality. On this occasion, Gabin is far more of a
force to be reckoned with - a tougher, more resilient character, very
different from the fragile romantic of his pre-war years. As a
result, the film's denouement is far more dramatic that in any previous
Duvivier film, and the evil temptress gets much more than she
deserves. What is most shocking about
Voici le temps des assassins is not
the central crime, as horrible as that may be, but the brutality of its
retribution. What Duvivier offers us is the grimmest portrait of
a society that has totally lost its moral bearing and fails to
recognise the value of human life; we really are living in the age of
the killer.
Duvivier's mise-en-scène is as slick as ever, particularly in the
last few reels which derive the maximum dramatic impact from the
horrific conclusion. Armand Thirard's cinematography adds greatly
to the tense, brooding mood of the film, achieving a similarly noirish
effect to that of Thirard's previous work on H.G. Clouzot's
Les
Diaboliques (1955), a similarly dark study in deceit and
depravity. The film's strongest selling point, however, has to be
its cast, principally the inspired casting of Jean Gabin and
Danièle Delorme. With Gabin old enough to be Delorme's
father, the casting was provocative but highly effective, albeit
nowhere near as scandalous as Gabin's subsequent pairing with Brigitte
Bardot in Claude Autant-Lara's
En cas de malheur (1958).
Delorme first found fame as Gigi, not in the Vincente Minnelli musical
but in the original French adaptation of the Colette novel directed by
Jacqueline Audry 1949. Since that film, the actress had become
pretty well typecast as the innocent ingénue, so the role of the
murderous Catherine in
Voici le
temps des assassins came as a welcome escape for an actress
seeking to broaden her repertoire. Delorme's performance in this
film is one of her finest. Even though her character's uglier
side is revealed to us at an early stage, she somehow manages to retain
our sympathy. Catherine is as much a victim of circumstances as
the men she chooses to destroy. It is easier to pity the young
woman who is driven to commit a terrible crime than those who foolishly
fail to see through her lies and allow themselves to be led to the
slaughter like sheep. The death cries she utters in the film's
savage climax cut through the spectator like a knife, far harder to
endure than the sight of the murder she is driven to commit.
Jean Gabin turns in another solid performance, providing the film with
its deceptive moral centre as the seemingly unimpeachable restaurant
owner. Gabin still retains a vestige of his pre-war romanticism,
but he had by this stage in his career acquired a far more
down-to-earth persona, a patriarchal toughness that is only just
tempered by his Gallic charm. The actor had already become
accustomed to playing heavies, in films such as
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954)
and
Razzia sur la Chnouf (1955),
and it is this new, tougher, more cynical Gabin that we see in
Voici le temps des assassins.
The role of the earlier Gabin - the naïve romantic - is taken by
Gérard Blain, an actor who would later become associated with
the French New Wave, through his collaborations with François
Truffaut (
Les Mistons), Jean-Luc Godard (
Charlotte et son Jules) and,
most importantly, Claude Chabrol (
Le Beau Serge,
Les
Cousins).
The other notable name in the cast list is Lucienne Bogaert, who is
superbly well cast as Catherine's grotesque, drug-addicted mother
Gabrielle. With her severe features and fiercely matriarchal
persona, Bogaert was particularly well suited for the role of the
overly protective mother, as she demonstrated in Robert Bresson's
Les Dames du Bois de Boulogne
(1945) and Jean Delannoy's
Maigret tend un piège
(1958). Here, Bogaert's character Gabrielle is more pathetic than
evil; her role is simply to provide a mirror in which the wicked nature
of Delorme's character is revealed to us - the soul of the daughter
reflected in the face of the mother, a face that could not be more
revealing of Julien Duvivier's cruel, unforgiving antipathy towards
women.
© James Travers 2012
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Next Julien Duvivier film:
L'Homme à l'imperméable (1957)