Read The Oxford History of World Cinema Online
Authors: Geoffrey Nowell-Smith
de Guise ('The assassination of the Duc de Guise', 1908), whose deepspace mise-en-scène
(including 'authentic' décors), economical acting style (particularly that of Charles Le
Bargy), and succinct editing had a considerable influence, at least in France. That
influence can be seen, in conjunction with the system of narrative continuity earlier
developed by Pathé, in subsequent historical films, many based on nineteenth-century
plays and operas. Although most clearly evident in those dealing with an indigenous
French history, such as SCAGL's La Mort du Duc d'Enghien ('The death of the Duc
d'Enghien', 1909) and Gaumont's Le Huguenot ('The Huguenot', 1909), it is also apparent
in films as disparate as Film d'Art's La Tosca ( 1909) and Werther ( 1910). Generally,
those running counter to this pattern were 'oriental' films such as Pathé's Cléopâtre and
Sémiramis (both 1910), whose privileged moments of spectacle (accentuated by the
company's trademark stencil colour) and 'exotic' characters served to reinforce the
mandate for France's colonial empire.
Gaumont's 'realist' Scènes de la vie telle qu'elle est ('Scenes from Real Life') series, the
same company's bleak railyard melodrama, Sur les rails ('On the rails', 1912), directed by
Léonce Perret, or Pathé's intricately choreographed bourgeois melodrama La Coupable
('The guilty one', 1912), directed by René Leprince. At least two short films from Pathé
and Gaumont respectively -- Georges Monca's astonishing L'Épouvante ('The terror',
1911), starring Mistinguett, and Henri Fescourt's Jeux d'enfants ('Children's games', 1913)
-- even used extensive cross-cutting with a skill that rivalled Griffith's. Finally, the best of
the comic series increased to a full reel, a length perfectly suited for Perret's sophisticated
Léonce series ( 1912-14). Films such as Les Épingles ('The pins'), Léonce à la campagne
(Léonce in the country'), and Léonce cinématographiste (Léonce the cinematographer')
(all 1913) reveal that this series deftly exploited the social situations in which Perret
himself, as a solidly assured bourgeois type, either outsmarted or was outsmarted by his
wife (usually Suzanne Grandais) in a perpetual battle for domestic dominance.
It was also in 1911 that 'feature' films of three or more reels began appearing on cinema
programmes. Pathé introduced the first of these that spring: Capellani's historical
melodrama Le Courrier de Lyon ('The courier of Lyons'), and Gérard Bourgeois's 'social
drama' Victimes d'alcool ('Victims of alcohol'). Not until the autumn, however, was there
a clear sense that such lengthy films would prove acceptable and profitable. Every major
production company invested in the new format, with films that spanned the spectrum of
available genres. Pathé and Film d'Art drew on the cultural capital of familiar literary
adaptations with, respectively, Notre Dame de Paris ('The hunchback of Notre-Dame'),
starring Henry Krauss and Stacia Napierkowska, and Madame Sans-Gêne, in which
Réjane reprised her celebrated performance in Victorien Sardou's play of twenty years
before. Gaumont contributed a film from Feuillade's Vie telle qu'elle est series, La Tare
('The fault'), starring Renée Carl, which headlined the programme inaugurating the
Gaumont-Palace. Based on its past success, Éclair banked on Jasset's adaptation of Léon
Sazie's popular serial crime novel Zigomar, starring Arquillière as a master criminal who
could also be read as a ruthless capitalist entrepreneur.
Over the next few years, feature-length films became the principal weekly attraction on
French cinema programmes. Film d'Art, for instance, convinced Sarah Bernhardt to
reprise one of her more famous roles in La Dame aux camélias ('The lady of the
camellias', 1912), which led to her performance in Louis Mercanton's independent
production of Queen Elizabeth ( 1912) and to a hugely successful roadshow presentation
in the USA. Whereas these two films relied on an old-fashioned tableau style of
representation, Capellani skilfully integrated a wide range of representational strategies in
perhaps the best, and certainly the most exhibited, French historical film, SCAGL's
twelve-reel Les Misérables ('The wretched', 1912), again with Krauss. Most feature-
length films, however, now took on contemporary subjects. A former playwright and
theatre director, Camille de Morlhon proved adept at imitating the pre-war boulevard
melodrama, as in his Valetta production of La Broyeuse des cceurs ('The breaker of
hearts', 1913). Éclair, by contrast, continued to trade on its crime series, in Jasset's
Zigomar contre Nick Carter ('Zigomar against Nick Carter', 1912) and Zigomar, peau
d'anguille ('Zigomar the eelskin', 1913), until Gaumont seized control of the genre with
Feuillade's famous Fantômas series (starring René Navarre), which ran to five separate
films between 1913 and 1914. For Gaumont, Perret also directed two 'super-productions',
L'Enfant de Paris ('The child of Paris', 1913) and Roman d'un mousse (A midshipman's
tale', 1914), which neatly combined features of the crime series with others from the
domestic melodrama in narratives involving a lost, threatened child. In fact, L'Enfant de
Paris became one of the first French films to occupy an entire Paris cinema programme.
THE GREAT WAR: COLLAPSE AND RECOVERY
The general mobilization orders in early August 1914 brought all activity in the French
cinema industry to an abrupt halt. Until recently, it has been customary to use the war to
explain the decline of the French-vis-à-vis the American cinema industry. Although there
is some truth to that claim, the French position had been weakening before the war began.
By 1911, for instance, under pressure from MPPC restrictions and the 'independent'
companies' expansion, Pathé's portion of the total film footage released in the USA had
dropped to less than 10 per cent. By the end of 1913, in both numbers of film titles and
total footage in distribution, the French were losing ground to the Americans on their own
home territory. The war simply accelerated a process already well under way, and its most
devastating effect, other than cutting off production, was severely to restrict the export
market on which the French companies so heavily depended for distributing their films.
Although Pathé, Gaumont, Éclair, and Film d'Art all resumed production in early 1915,
wartime restrictions on capital and material forced them to operate at a much reduced
level and to rerelease popular pre-war films. Furthermore, they faced an 'invasion' of
imported American and Italian films which quickly filled French cinemas, one of the few
entertainment venues to reopen and operate on a regular basis. And many of those films
were distributed by new companies, some with American backing. First came a wave of
Keystone comedies, most of them distributed by Western Imports/ Jacques Haik, which
had become a crucial foreign distributor just before the war. By the summer and autumn,
through Western Imports and Adam, the films of Charlie Chaplin (nicknamed Charlot)
were the rage everywhere. Next came Les Mystères de New York ('The mysteries of New
York'), a compilation of Pearl White's ' first two serials, produced by Pathé's American
affiliate and distributed by Pathé in France, and its only rival in popularity was the Italian
spectacular Cabiria ( 1914). By 1916, through Charles Mary and Monat-Film, it was the
turn of Triangle films, especially the Westerns of William S. Hart (nicknamed Rio Jim),
and Famous Players adaptations such as Cecil B. DeMille's The Cheat ( 1915)), which ran
for six months at the Select cinema in Paris.
The 'tableau': Sarah Bernhardt in Louis Mercanton's Queen Elizaveth ( 1912)
Despite contributing to the onslaught of American films, as well as losing critical
personnel like Capellani and Linder to the USA, Pathé remained a major distributor of
French product. Not only did the company support feature-length productions from
SCAGL (Leprince, Monca) and Valetta (Morlhon), but it sought out new film-makers,
notably the famous theatre director André Antoine. Pathé also provided financial backing
to Film d'Art, where Henri Pouctal was joined by young Abel Gance. Gaumont, by
contrast, had to cut back its production schedule, especially after Perret left to work in the
USA. Yet it maintained a strong presence in the industry, largely through Feuillade's
popular, long-running serials as well as its circuit of cinemas (the second largest after
Pathé's). Although continuing to produce films, Éclair never fully recovered from the
double blow of the war and a fire that destroyed its American studio and laboratories in
April 1914. Eventually, the company reorganized into smaller components, the most
important devoted to processing film stock and manufacturing camera equipment: Éclair's
camera, for instance, competed with Debrie's 'Parvo' and Bell & Howell's for dominance
in the world market. Eclipse survived largely on the strength of its new film-making team,
Mercanton and René Hervil. In spite of the odds, independent production companies
actually increased in number, and some (those of André Hugon, Jacques de Baroncelli,
and Germaine Dulac) even flourished. That they could succeed under such conditions was
due, in large part, to the relatively widespread distribution their films had in France,
through AGC or especially Aubert, whose circuit of cinemas continued to expand.
The French films available to spectators between 1915 and 1918 were somewhat different
from before. Perhaps because it was now difficult for the French to laugh at themselves,
at least as they had been accustomed to, the once prolific comic series almost
disappeared. Pathé kept up the Rigadin series, but with fewer titles; Gaumont went on
making Bout-de-Zan films and then concocted a series with Marcel Levesque. Production
of large-scale historical films was also curtailed, unless they were conceived within a
serial format, as was Film d'Art's Le Comte de MonteCristo ('The Count of Monte-Cristo',
1917-18), directed by Pouctal and starring Léon Mathot. Given French budget restrictions
and the success of Pearl White's films, the serial became a staple of production, especially
for Gaumont. There, Feuillade turned out one twelve-episode film per year, returning to
the crime serial in Les Vampires ('The Vampires', 1915-16), then shifting to focus on a
detective hero (played by René Cresté) in Judex ( 1917) and La Nouvelle Mission de
Judex ('Judex's new mission', 1918). Otherwise, patriotic melodramas were de rigueur, at
least for the first two years of the war: perhaps the most publicized were Pouctal's Alsace
( 1915), starring Réjane, and Mercanton and Hervil's Mères françaises ('French mothers',
1916), which posed Bernhardt at Joan of Arc's statue before the ruined Rheims cathedral.
Soon these gave way, however, to more conventional melodramas and adaptations drawn
from the pre-war boulevard theatre of Bataille, Bernstein, and Kistemaeckers. Many of
these films were now devoted to women's stories, in acknowledgement of their dominant
presence in cinema audiences and of their ideological significance on the 'home front'
during the war. Moreover, they gave unusual prominence to female stars: to Mistinguett,
for instance, in such Hugon films as Fleur de Paris ('Flower of Paris', 1916), Grandais in
Mercanton and Hervil's Suzanne series, and Maryse Dauvray in Morlhon films such as
Marise ( 1917). But most prominent of all,. between 1916 and 1918, in more than a dozen
films directed by Monca and Leprince for SCAGL, was the boulevard actress Gabrielle
Robinne.
Out of such melodramas developed the most advanced strategies of representation and
narration in France, particularly in what Gance polemically called 'psychological' films.
Some, like Gaumont's one-reel Têtes de femme, femmes de tête ('Women's heads, wise
women', 1916), directed by Jacques Feyder exclusively in close shots, nearly passed
unnoticed. But others were celebrated by Émile Vuillermoz in Le Temps and by Colette
and Louis Delluc in a new weekly trade journal, Le Film. The most important were
Gance's own Le Droit à la vie ('The right to life', 1916) and especially Mater Dolorosa
( 1917), both much indebted to The Cheat and starring Emmy Lynn. Through unusual
lighting, framing, and editing strategies, Mater Dolorosa seemed to revolutionize the