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1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
PUBLIC AFFAIRS (Robert Bresson, 1934) **1/2, 21 December 2011
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
This film is pretty unique in the annals of cinema history, in that the
efforts by the same director that came afterwards were such polar
opposites that one can barely believe his eyes when watching it: the
thing is that this 23-minute short was believed lost and only retrieved
in 1987, when Bresson had effectively retired (being then 86 years
old)
so that, to most movie buffs and admirers of the director, his
debut proved to be the one they got to see last (in my case, it was the
penultimate one, since I chose to watch this, A GENTLE WOMAN {1969},
and the documentary THE ROAD TO BRESSON {1984} on the 12th anniversary
of his passing, just two weeks shy of the new millennium!).
Anyway, this is a satirical farce with political overtones, very much
in the style of The Marx Bros. masterpiece DUCK SOUP (1933) since it
involves two neighboring fictionalized countries and the ending, with
two newscasters disapproving of an elderly high-society dame's singing
by flinging objects at her, is a literal borrowing/tribute. The runaway
princess subplot, then, may well have been inspired by the W.C. Fields
vehicle YOU'RE TELLING ME! (1934), albeit emerging as its weakest link.
Another obvious influence here is Charlie Chaplin especially in the
set-piece of the unveiling of a statue (which, depicting a yawning man,
unleashes a veritable flood of boredom/exhaustion grimaces among the
spectators of the ceremony and even the heroine, whose airplane
summarily crashes!), but also the fact that a squad of firemen here
behave as if they were The Keystone Kops.
In the end, the film is more a curio (if anything, it owes at least as
much to Rene' Clair as it does the afore-mentioned Hollywood star
comedians) than a success, but it undeniably boasts a handful of
innovations and side-splitting moments: the sound of a tuba causes a
house to move off its hinges, which is then brought back into place by
a Pied Piper-ish flute player!; one of the firemen is a professional
fire-eater, so that every time a spark is lit (as part of the town
festivities), he rushes to extinguish the flame by gobbling it up!;
finally, the climactic christening of a ship by the traditional
breaking of a champagne bottle against its side proves problematic
because of the incredible resilience of the glassware someone has the
bright idea of using a cannon to destroy the bottle but, first, the
heaving of the evidently cumbersome weapon onto the platform almost
brings the whole crashing down but, then, the blast naturally produces
a hole in the vessel which, upon being slid into the sea, it promptly
sinks!
For the record, the unearthed print of this one (which had actually
been stored under a different title!) is in a rather precarious state,
with the image so fuzzy that one can hardly make out the actors' facial
features!; incidentally, future Jean Renoir regular and reliable
Hollywood character actor Marcel Dalio appears in four separate roles
here (including a Military General who, in order to have a medal pinned
on his chest, it is required to shear off his lengthy beard!). So,
while France may have lost a comic genius when Bresson returned to
film-making 9 years later, World Cinema certainly gained one of its
most rigorous analysts into the human condition (and the quest for
spiritual grace).
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Bresson's Debut Film, 22 June 2009
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Author:
CitizenCaine from Las Vegas, Nevada
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Innovative French Director Robert Bresson wrote and directed this brief look at what happens under two opposing republics. Bresson gleefully skewers ceremonies, politics, and pretension in general in this exercise in slapstick comedy. The film opens with a ticker-tape parade, and dignitaries absolutely drowning in all the confetti. More sight gags follow in quick succession. A dignitary receives a flower and absent-mindedly tosses it to the ground, where a street sweeper quickly sweeps it up. Ladies resort to a racy Busby Berkley-like dance maneuver prior to the unveiling of a statue in front of a public gathering. The unveiling recalls Chaplin's opening in City Lights. There's even a Chaplin-like chap who pops up now and then during the film. When a dignitary yawns mirroring a statue while presenting it, it sets off a visual set of dominoes, culminating with the complete nosedive of a plane with a female pilot: absolutely hilarious. The pretentiousness of full military dress with the old world long beard is poked fun at as well. Soldiers become like the Keystone Cops when a large building facade does a shimmy because of a tuba. A dignitary is hosed when his platform becomes overheated. The coup de grace is watching several attempts to christen a new ship go awry and the ship itself, Titanic in nature, sinks. A lot of sight gags and political jests are packed into a short film, which purportedly is still incomplete despite restorative efforts. **1/2 of 4 stars.
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