ALASTAIR PHILLIPS
UK.
CITY OF
Darkness
ISBN 90-5356-634-1
CITY OF
Light
MIGR FILMMAKERS IN PARIS 1929-1939
9 789053 566343
ALASTAIR PHILLIPS
Amsterdam University Press
Amsterdam University Press
WWW.AUP.NL
City of Darkness, City of Light
City of Darkness, City of Light
Alastair Phillips
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved
above, no part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a
retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, me-
chanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permis-
sion of both the copyright owner and the author of the book.
Contents
Acknowledgements 7
Notes 177
Appendices 191
Appendix One: Tobis In Paris Filmography 1929-1939 191
Appendix Two: Osso Filmography 1930-1939 192
Appendix Three: Anatole Litvak Filmography 1930-1936 193
Appendix Four: Kurt Courant Filmography 1929-1939 194
Appendix Five: Erich Pommer French-Language Filmography
1930-1934 196
Appendix Six: Robert Siodmak French-Language Filmography
1931-1939 197
Appendix Seven: Nero Films Filmography 1930-1939 198
Appendix Eight: La crise est finie 199
Appendix Nine: La vie Parisienne 201
Appendix Ten: Mauvaise graine 203
Appendix Eleven: Coeur de lilas 205
Appendix Twelve: Dans les rues 207
Appendix Thirteen: Carrefour 210
Appendix Fourteen: Piges 212
Appendix Fifteen: Liliom 215
Filmography 219
Bibliography 221
Index 243
Acknowledgements
The research for this book was supported principally by the British Academy
but also by the Humanities Research Centre at the University of Warwick and
the Research Endowment Trust Fund at the University of Reading.
With cities, it is as with dreams: everything imaginable can be dreamed, but even
the most unexpected dream is a rebus that conceals a desire or, its reverse, a fear.
(Italo Calvino 1974, 44)
In 1931, the French painter Maurice Vlaminck wrote that he now tended to
avoid going to Paris. It has become for me like a train station, a kind of West-
ern Constantinople, a junction [and] a bazaar (in Golan 1995, 88). Vlamincks
acerbic description of the bustling and cosmopolitan nature of Parisian life
points to the fact that the French capital did indeed become a terminus or junc-
tion for various groups of migrs in the 1930s. Among the people drawn to
the possibilities of the City of Light were a succession of European filmmakers
who arrived in Paris from the internationally successful studios of Berlin.
Some like Fritz Lang and Billy Wilder stayed only a brief time. The director
Robert Siodmak, on the other hand, ended up working in France for a number
of years. This book looks at the significance of this moment in film history
through a detailed analysis of the migrs various on- and off-screen relation-
ships with their adopted home.
Home is not the correct word. The truth is that many of these migrs
were displaced figures on a journey that remained, as it must always be for the
exile, both composite and evolutionary (Naficy 2001, 222). The time that
filmmakers such as Wilder, Lang and Siodmak spent in Paris, in what fellow
migr Siegfried Kracauer has termed the near vacuum of extraterritoriality
(in Koch 1991,105), was, for many, but one episode of a larger trajectory. To ex-
tend the railway analogy, Paris was a waiting room (Elsaesser 1984, 278): a
place of temporary refuge before their journey onwards to the more rewarding
terrain of Hollywood. Because of the glamour of this final destination, and de-
spite the fact that the migr filmmakers clearly made a significant contribu-
tion to French cinema, there is still little written in English about this unique
and fascinating phenomenon. My book seeks to redress this imbalance.
To examine the cinematic representation of Paris by migr filmmakers in
the French cinema of the 1930s means to engage with the ways in which Euro-
pean national cinemas are currently being reconceptualized as discrete discur-
sive and economic phenomena. As Tim Bergfelder has rightly stated, the his-
10 City of Darkness, City of Light
Previous critical work on the culture of urban space has argued that the gen-
eral relationship between the cinema and the city is a complex one. In a tradi-
tion going back to the early nineteenth century, cities like Paris have been per-
ceived as texts to be explored or deciphered in their own right. In Ludwig
Brnes Schilerungen aus Paris (Depictions From Paris) (1822-4), for instance, he
described the French capital as an unfolded book [so that] wandering
through it streets means reading (in Gleber 1999, 66). James Donald more re-
cently, has argued that the city (...) is above all a representation (...) an imag-
Introduction 11
ined environment (1992, 422), whereas Raymond Williams has even sug-
gested, more broadly, that the fictional method is the experience of the city
(in Caws 1991, 1). Coupled with these claims has come the suggestion that as
an imagined environment, the city is shaped by the interaction of practices,
events and relations so complex that they cannot easily be visualized (Don-
ald, 457). As a result, a preponderance of metaphors exists to describe the vari-
ous facets of urban experience. As both Italo Calvinos quotation and the title
of my book suggest, these metaphors may be both positive and negative. The
city, for instance, has been seen as a theatrical stage a place of transformation
and possibility but it has also been seen as a corrupt and corrupting machine
at odds with the rural certainties of the past.
If the city is a metaphorical text, it is unsurprising that much of the critical
discussion about urban culture and its meanings has centred around the fields
of perception and subjectivity. As Michel de Certeau notes, one single person
can never grasp the full measure of the concept of a city. When we walk the
city, we adapt it to our own creative purposes; (...) such negotiations produce
a different space (...) it is not a representation of space but a representational
space (in Donald, 436). Instead of describing and analyzing the complex in-
teraction of practices, events and relations that make up the city as a tentative
whole, what results is an interpretative practice which privileges the individ-
uals perceptual encounter with the urban. The cinema, as the pre-eminent ur-
ban based visual medium of mass communication, clearly fits in with this in-
terest in sight and the city. There is surely an analogy between ones viewing of
the textual spaces of the cinematic narrative, and the walkers encounter with
the created spaces of the built city environment. Writing in the 1920s, for in-
stance, Carlo Mierendorff observed that the flash-like and disjointed succes-
sion of movement characteristic of early silent cinema seemed to correspond to
the receptive disposition of the city dweller (in Gleber, 1999, 141). Both ele-
ments clearly concern a broken and fragmented mode of vision which disrupts
an apparent pre-modern sense of the unity of space and time. In the case of the
city walker, this way of seeing is achieved by the relationship of the moving
body to the street and its attractions. With the cinematic spectator, it is
achieved by means of the mobility of the camera and the fragmentation of
space and time through editing.1
A problem with this line of enquiry, fascinating though it is, is that by con-
tinuing to pursue chains of metaphorical association, one ends up potentially
negating the possibilities open within a more specifically grounded historical
perspective. Fundamental to this perspective are the ways in which particular
social, economic, political, and cultural factors force one to consider not just
how the city was seen, but by whom and when. This book will therefore move
beyond the generalities of much that has been written on the cinematic city
12 City of Darkness, City of Light
Paris in the 1930s was in many ways a divided city. As Marc Aug (1996) has
demonstrated with evocative precision in his discussion of an anthology of Pa-
risian photographs of the era, the city was marked strongly by currents of con-
tinuity and change. Now, with the hindsight of an historical perspective which
can view the war about to happen, as well as the one that had just ended, the
city appears as a site of various temporalities. Behind the aesthetic facade of
the two international Parisian exhibitions of the decade the Exposition
Coloniale of 1931 and the Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques of
1937 lay a society uncertain of itself; a society that kept one eye on the trau-
mas of the First World War, and one eye on the gathering political problems in
the rest of Europe. Marred by a succession of short-lived governments, the
French capital was riven by political tensions which brought citizens onto the
streets in riots, strikes, and demonstrations throughout the decade. One indi-
cation of this insecurity was the way in which the vocal supporters of the
French right laid claim to individual national pride whilst at the same time
genuflecting to an imported ideology from a former military enemy. Another
was the way in which the French capital handled the progression of modern-
ization in terms of its built environment. Despite the growth of the greater Pa-
risian region in the 1920s and early 1930s, with its expansion in housing, facto-
ries, and railways, the city was still a place which took pride in traditional
social mores. If Norma Evenson (1979, 255) is right in suggesting that Paris lies
at the crossroads in Europe between a Mediterranean and a Northern lifestyle,
it appears that in this decade, at least within the cultural discourse, the more
Southern model of the Parisian quartier as family community was still domi-
nant. This tradition was carried over into the spheres of popular entertain-
ment; especially within the cinematic representation of urban life.
Introduction 13
By the 1930s, with the population of the intramural city stabilised at around
the three million mark, and the subsequent rapid growth in the rim of subur-
ban development encouraged by the development of tramlines and rail net-
works, Parisians were beginning to make use of the advent of paid holidays to
view non-urban France. The fact remains though that representations of the
city remained enormously popular for the French film-going public. It is still
surprising, despite the centrality of the French capital in terms of cinematic
production, exhibition, and representation, that there is so little sustained ana-
lytical writing about film and Paris. Art history has long privileged Paris as a
site of meaning especially in the case of French nineteenth century painting
14 City of Darkness, City of Light
but film studies has yet to fully engage with the city. The French cinema of the
1930s abounds with titles suggesting an affinity with the French capital. Many
of these are now forgotten, but they suggest a range of locations and genres.
They include: Aux Portes de Paris (Barrois, 1935), Aventures de Paris
(Allgret, 1936), Cendrillon de Paris (Hmard, 1930), Enfants de Paris
(Rouds, 1936), Jeunes Filles de Paris (Vermorel, 1936), Mnilmontant
(Guissart, 1936), Minuit Place Pigalle (Richeb, 1934), Moulin Rouge (Hugon,
1939), Paris mes amours (Blondeau, 1936), Quartier Latin (Colombier,
1939), Rendezvous Champs-lyses (Houssin, 1937), Rive-Gauche (Korda,
1931), Le Roi des Champs-lyses (Nosseck, 1933), Tourbillon de Paris
(Diamant-Berger, 1938), Trois Argentins Montmartre (Hugon, 1939),
Trois artilleurs lOpra (Chotin, 1938) and La Vie Parisienne (Siodmak,
1936). Various anthologies have featured short written pieces on Paris and the
cinema, and writers like Adrian Rifkin (1995) have introduced film in their dis-
cursive analysis of Parisian entertainment culture.2 The two books which spe-
cifically deal with the topic, Charles Ford and Ren Jeannes Paris vu par le
cinma (1969) and Jean Douchet and Gilles Nadeaus Paris-une ville vue par le
cinma, de 1895 nos jours (1987), still remain inadequate. The former pursues
the question of film adaptations from well-known Parisian literary texts and
provides scant textual or historical detail. The latter is more comprehensive,
but it is primarily concerned with being a pictorial illustrated survey of what is
still a field largely dominated by the canonical texts of poetic realism and the
Nouvelle Vague. This book will provide the first sustained discussion of a num-
ber of popular cinematic interpretations of the French capital.
Thanks to the work of a number of scholars, we now do have a detailed un-
derstanding of various facets of the French cinema of the 1930s. Survey texts
such as Pierre Billards LAge classique du cinma franais. Du cinma parlant la
Nouvelle Vague (1995), Raymond Chirats Le cinma franais des annes trentes
(1983) and Atmosphres: sourires, soupirs et dlires du cinma Franais des annes 30
(1987) and Jean Pierre Jeancolass 15 ans dannes trente: le cinma des franais
(1983) have documented key moments in the eras history by providing a de-
scriptive analysis of indicative texts and individuals. Writers such as Frances
Courtade (1978), Colin Crisp (1993) and Paul Lglise (1970) have sought to ex-
amine the logistical economic, political, and technological determinants of the
cinema as an industrial practice. Michle Lagny, Marie-Claire Ropars and Pi-
erre Sorlin (1986) have investigated the character roles and narrative struc-
tures which dominated the decades film output. For the purposes of my ex-
ploration of the cultural representation of Paris and the significance of the
German migrs, I have particularly drawn upon the recent work of Richard
Abel (1993), Dudley Andrew (1995) and Ginette Vincendeau (1985 et al). The
former has provided a useful introduction to the many written debates circu-
Introduction 15
lating at the time about the nature of the French film industry and its place
within the overall culture of the time. Andrews rigorous and sustained analy-
sis of one key facet of 1930s French cinema poetic realism has provided a se-
rious example of how to write film history on the basis of what he terms con-
crete cultural manifestations (1995, xi). Andrew has sought to locate a
historiography somewhere between the poles of the formation of an auteurist
canon and a model of social analysis predicated on a mode of reductive social
determinism. Borrowing from Roland Barthes term of criture, he has sug-
gested the analytical model of an optique which helps make concrete the mys-
terious operations of the auteur (who chooses a particular aesthetic option be-
fore contributing personal style), while at the same time [specifying] the
aesthetic and cultural fields within which artworks make their mark (19). Ac-
cording to Andrew this always suggests a limited set of possibilities alive at a
given moment in a specific cinematic situation (19). Whilst finding myself in
broad agreement with many of his conclusions, it will become evident that I
have also shifted the terrain of analysis. Several of the films that I discuss were
projects many of the filmmakers concerned were probably reluctant to make.
Their outsider status dictated choices motivated by important economic, as
well as aesthetic, factors. Despite the fact that the migrs clearly opened up
stylistic options that would be crucial for poetic realism (Andrew, 176), they
also made city-based musicals, operettas, caper movies and melodramas.3
These films should not be seen as less interesting because of this. Rather, as
well as being suggestive evidence of the heterogeneity of popular French film
culture of the time, they also provide valuable new perspectives on the depic-
tion of the French capital. Finally, Vincendeau reminds one of the dangers of
going back to a history of how French society of the 1930s [was] reflected in its
films (1985, 11). Her ongoing project of uncovering the inter-textual nature of
1930s French film practice has allowed one, instead, to see how the category of
the socio-historical was actually inscribed within filmic texts themselves
(11). I have largely followed the example of her model in this book and will
also show that any history of the cinema of the period is, at least in part, also a
history of that epochs popular entertainment culture.
The early years of the 1930s were marked by the transition from silent to sound
film production. As many have pointed out, the introduction of speech, dia-
logue, and an actors verbal performance reframed the question of how the
French cinema could differ from and challenge of the American cinema (Abel
16 City of Darkness, City of Light
1993, 9). This notion of what a nationally specific French sound cinema meant
is an ongoing reference point in my discussion of the migrs. As I have al-
ready mentioned, Paris was more than the migrs temporary home. It was
also the symbol of the French nation and, as such, it became one of the key sites
where definitions of the eras cinematic production became determined. The
arrival of so many filmmakers from another European capital clearly provides
a fascinating historical opportunity to contextualise this process. We will see,
for example, how apparently stable notions of national identity in relation to
the city were troubled or refracted by the arrival of the migrs. A question still
remains over the degree to which the migrs were either seen negatively
because they were not French enough, or were seen positively because as fel-
low Europeans they could contribute to the ongoing trade battle with the eco-
nomic hegemony of the United States.
The waves of migr filmmakers from Berlin in the 1930s must be under-
stood within the overall context of the twentieth century rise in immigration
into France. After the first decade of the twentieth century, France was the
leading host country in the world for newly arrived migrants. In 1930, exceed-
ing its nearest rival, the United States, France had a foreign-born population of
515 out of every 100, 000 people (Noiriel 1996, 146). This rise had primarily
been necessitated by the depletion in the male workforce after the First World
War, but it was also linked to the modernisation of the Paris region. In his
study of France and its non-indigenous population, Grard Noiriel (1996, 151)
has argued that because of the myth of origin that was built upon the events
of the Revolution (...) French immigration [has] always [been] approached as a
question extrinsic to the countrys history. It [has been] seen as a fleeting phe-
nomenon, something fleeting and marginal. As I have indicated, this has cer-
tainly been the case regarding the ways in which the Parisian work of the Ger-
man migrs has been discussed. Conventional film history has tended to
bypass the passage of German exiles and migrs in France in favour of pro-
viding an account of their subsequent work in Hollywood.4 Recent books such
as Anthony Heilbuts Exiled in Paradise (1997) and Stephanie Barrons Exiles
and Emigrs (1997), which also look at the broader dimensions of European art-
ists exile to United States, largely do so from a high cultural perspective. Ex-
isting work on the German migrs in Paris (Gilbert Badia et al. and
Jean-Michel Palmier 1988) tends as well to only consider such fields as litera-
ture, political philosophy, and journalism. There is still a lack of critical mate-
rial on the time filmmakers spent in the French capital. Was this, as Elsaesser
(1983a, 1) has already suggested, due to the apparent lack of success of the
films that the migrs actually made?
Elsaesser has been one of the pioneers in readjusting the focus of study of
this neglected aspect of film history. His documentation with Vincendeau
Introduction 17
(1983) provided the valuable corrective to the notion that the Berlin migrs
were a uniform grouping. As I shall also demonstrate, it is important to distin-
guish between the political phase of emigration after the Reichstag fire in 1933,
and the previous wave of economically and technically related emigration.
Much that has subsequently been written about the migrs has tended, un-
derstandably, to privilege the difference of their work from conventional
French film practice (Elsaesser 1984a and various essays in Jacques Aumont
and Dominique Pani 1992; Heiner Gassen and Heike Hurst 1991; Sibylle
Sturm and Arthur Wohlgemuth 1996). By reiterating this difference and link-
ing it to the migrs prior work in Berlin, these accounts still contribute to the
problematic assertion that the migrs failed while in the French capital. The
considerable importance of the place of the migrs in French film culture of
the 1930s has yet to be fully documented. While I am not interested in the inad-
visable task of measuring the relative greatnesses of the migr French films, I
do, nonetheless, believe that it is essential to also account for how successful
the migrs were in fitting in. To this extent then, I agree with Noiriel (1996,
169) who argues that if the collective memory of immigrant communities
can be analysed, it can only be done so according to an ongoing sense of
contestation. This would involve what he calls a never ending struggle be-
tween what mile Durkheim called native dispositions, which impel the in-
dividual to turn back to his native traditions; and everyday life in a foreign
land, which requires some form of adaptation, that is, a sacrifice of the past for
the sake of the present and future.
As Hamid Naficy has recently observed, this sense of contestation is often
markedly present in exilic cinema; both in terms of how we conceive of its
modes of production and how we perceive its means of visualization. What
Naficy calls accented cinema (2001, 4) resonates for him because it is cre-
ated astride and in the interstices of social formations and cinematic practices
(4). It may work against and within dominant forms of cultural representation
to the extent that the exiless own hybrid sense of cultural and personal iden-
tity is also somehow visualised and expressed through a similarly hybrid
mode of filmmaking. This sense of hybridity which Salmon Rushdie, in an-
other context, calls being at once plural and partial (in Naficy, 13) is useful
in relation to the history of the migrs in Paris, especially in a stylistic sense.
However, we must also be aware, of course, of the then problematic produc-
tion context of mainstream French cinema of the 1930s. Questions of adapta-
tion and integration were obviously more significant in this period than in the
case of the more contemporary conceptualisation of an independently fi-
nanced diasporic or exilic mode of filmmaking. Elsaessers model of a lateral
history of interference which can replace a linear history of influence
(2000, 428) is therefore also pertinent to my series of case studies. Rather than
18 City of Darkness, City of Light
necessarily seeing the Berlin migrs as separate and thus inflected simply
with the sense of being influential, shouldnt we also see the potential of a hy-
brid cinema in terms of what could be termed as a dialectical process of oscilla-
tion? That is to say, the history of the German migrs in Paris was never a uni-
form phenomenon. Perhaps, instead, it fluctuated between creative mis-
matches and miscognition on the one hand (with many a comedy of error and
some lost illusions), and over-adaptation, assimilation and over-identification
(this too, often with a grain of comic or tragic irony) (431).
I have divided the book into six chapters. The following chapter, The City in
Context, examines the social, political, economic, and cultural backgrounds
which inform my subsequent analysis of a number of the Paris films made by
the migrs. It proposes a complex and mutually informing set of contexts
which, taken as a whole, present a fruitful way of situating the cinematic rela-
tionship between France and Germany over the period in question. The nature
of my analysis, the result of synthesizing existing research with new readings
of primary source material, varies according to the questions I ask. At times, I
provide a wide-ranging and chronological perspective; elsewhere I have
found it useful to home in on a particular moment or individual in order to il-
lustrate some of the broader themes under discussion.
I begin by going back to the nineteenth century to situate a general discus-
sion of the shifting permutations of Franco-German relations. I then move to
the specific question of the different ways in which France and Germany made
sense of the crucial inter-relationship between the city and modernity. If one of
the key features of modern urban experience was a disruptive perceptual en-
counter with the new, an understanding of the specific intertwining of place
and memory in the capitals of Berlin and Paris may result in new ways of un-
derstanding the discussion and representation of urban life within the cities
respective film cultures. How, in particular, did the defining moment of the
First World War affect these matters? The war also left a significant material
legacy in terms of the future directions of the European film industry. I there-
fore go on to uncover how links and rivalries between the Franco-German film
industries over this period helped to pave the way for the subsequent patterns
of emigration from Berlin to Paris in the late 1920s and the early to mid-1930s.
As well as fully drawing upon relevant trade sources and personal memoirs to
provide the general picture, I also present a number of more biographically de-
tailed and discursive case studies. These serve a secondary purpose in that
Introduction 19
they introduce specific aesthetic and political themes which I develop later in
the course of my film analyses. The chapter ends with a discussion of the mat-
ter of the migrs arrival and reception in France. Here, I consider the
migrs place within 1930s French film culture in the light of their ethnicity
and cultural identity in order to examine how these apparent outsiders related
to the symbolically important site of the national capital. A complex picture
emerges regarding the notion of a homogenous national film culture at a time
when, in many quarters, that very notion had such political and economic sig-
nificance.
In Chapter Three, City of Light, I begin my discussion of the French films
made by the German migrs by examining three hitherto neglected examples
of migr film making in detail: La Crise est finie (Robert Siodmak, 1934)
(See Appendix Eight); La Vie Parisienne (Robert Siodmak, 1935) (See Appen-
dix Nine) and Mauvaise graine (Billy Wilder, 1933) (See Appendix Ten). I
contextualise this work by privileging the way that the films intersect with
many of the cultural conventions by which light Paris has historically been
understood. How, for example, did the migrs negotiate the entertainment
milieu of light Paris and its sense of spectacular pleasure? Did the migrs
conform to a way of viewing the capital which was in itself spectacular? How
did the migrs foreground existing city mythologies in their use of Parisian
stardom and performance? I draw upon a wide range of written source mate-
rial to understand not just the textual processes of the films, but the subse-
quent ways in which the films were then discussed.
Chapter Four, City of Darkness, deals with three other case studies of
migr city films which concern themselves with prevalent mythologies of the
French capital: Coeur de lilas (Anatole Litvak, 1931) (See Appendix Eleven);
Dans les rues (Victor Trivas, 1933) (See Appendix Twelve) and Carrefour
(Kurt Bernhardt, 1938) (See Appendix Thirteen). Here, I consider the obverse
of the notion that the city was the centre of spectacular pleasure by engaging
three methods to perhaps better understand Paris as a place associated with
the dark. Firstly, I look at the Parisian street as a site of literal, metaphorical,
and moral darkness to discuss how we may understand nationally specific
concerns about both French sound cinema and the wider progress of urban
modernity. By placing the work of the migrs at the heart of these debates, we
are able to see more clearly why their representation of Paris mattered, and
how it related to a broader inter-textual history. This history is crucial to my re-
lated discussion of the ways in which a number of the migrs contributed to
the picturing of Paris as the geographical heart of poetic realism. Secondly, I
examine the significance of the Parisian night, especially in terms of its associa-
tions with urban entertainment and crime, and consider how the migrs me-
diated various representational tropes relating to the spaces of the city where
20 City of Darkness, City of Light
crime and pleasure occurred notably the Parisian caf, the bal musette and the
nightclub. Finally, I return to some of the concerns introduced in Chapter Two
by re-examining the inter-relationship between place and memory in the con-
text of the past itself as dark. Here, I assess how the arrival of the migrs mat-
tered to the ways French cinema of the 1930s remembered Paris, and how this
related to broader questions facing French society of the time.
My penultimate chapter, Divided City, consolidates the previous chap-
ters discussion of the representation of Paris by means of a detailed case study
of the ways in which two specific migr films Piges (Robert Siodmak, 1939)
(See Appendix Fourteen) and Liliom (Fritz Lang, 1934) (See Appendix Fif-
teen) pictured the city in terms of both light and darkness. I begin with an ex-
tensive production and reception history of the features which examines how
they were split, like so much migr work, between seeing Paris as the centre
of a domestic film production system and Paris as a place of temporary exile. I
then go on to examine how this sense of division is consolidated by the way
the films employed, and then played with, two conventional male Parisian
star personas in the sense that an instability in male identity actually fore-
grounds the overall representational instability inherent in the films narra-
tives. Finally, I conclude this section by turning to the way in which the theme
of mobility in migr city narratives is reconfigured in both texts to shed new
light on Parisian representational myths of gender and place.
Mobility is a dominant motif in this book. In his study of ethnographic dis-
course, James Clifford (1992) noted how many of the French Surrealists spent
their time in hotels or hotel-like accommodations. He extended this observa-
tion to suggest that, in many ways, the cultural history of Paris in the early
twentieth century can be written in terms of seeing the city as a place of de-
partures, arrivals and transits (104). To some degree, of course, all cities, at all
times, have been sites of dwelling and travel (105), but I also believe that the
question of journeying has particular significance for my discussion of the rep-
resentation of the French capital by the waves of German migr filmmakers
in the 1930s. The idea of the journey can be uncovered in many of the actual
narratives of the films I look at, but what also strikes me as particularly reso-
nant is the way in which the migrs own journeys as filmmakers then be-
came inscribed in various extra-textual legal, economic, and critical discourses
of the period. Beyond the notion of what was undoubtedly, in many ways, an
alien production and reception environment, lies the pressing issue of identity
and the revealing journey of cultural transformation. For the migrs, as we
shall now see, the crucial issue remained the crucial distinction between cul-
tural difference and cultural assimilation; in other words, what Albert
Dreyfus, writing in 1930s Paris, simply termed the ability to adjust (in
Golan 1995, 141).
2 The City in Context
An Historical Ambivalence
In his evocative and modestly tempered account of the complex nature of the
relationships formed between Parisians and their German occupiers during
the Second World War, Richard Cobb rightly seeks to demonstrate the range of
feelings available within the framework of this situation. Instead of painting a
picture which conveys an unambiguous clash between the values of lightness
and dark; he argues that, certainly at the metropolitan level, relations be-
tween occupants and occups were obscured, twisted and complicated by all
sorts of nuances of personal relations, ranging from mutual trust to a jarring
acrimony (1983, 60). This question of cultural ambivalence frames the history
of the encounters between the two countries. If one goes back to the beginning
of the nineteenth century, for example, Napoleon formally banned Madame de
Stals enthusiastic collected writings on the literary and philosophical culture
of the German states entitled De lAllemagne (1810). An interest in German in-
tellectual life persisted, however, with the founding of the Nouvelle Revue
Germanique in 1829 by Marquis Edouard de Lagrange. Meanwhile, for many
German cultural figures such as Ludwig Brne, and Heinrich Heine who first
moved to the city in 1831, Paris represented a beacon of free intellectual and lit-
erary expression. In Heines writings, he referred to its gracious and civilised
air (in Kruse and Werner 1981, 97). Like many others, he saw the city as more
than just the capital of one nation. For him, Paris, then the largest city in Eu-
rope, also stood as the capital of the enlightened values of the European world.
A sequence of travel books and memoirs followed from German writers based
temporarily in Paris (Gleber 1999, 6-12). Throughout the nineteenth century,
admiration within the Parisian intelligentsia for the liberating currents of Ger-
man idealist philosophy was consistently tempered by a sense of trepidation
regarding the military strengths of their near neighbour. Michelet wrote of
my Germany, the scientific power that alone has made me study questions
deeply, and given Kant, Beethoven, and me a new faith (in Zeldin 1993, 116);
yet it was this same national culture that fought with such vigour and animos-
ity during the campaign of the 1870 war to annex Alsace-Lorraine. Frances di-
vided perception of the German nation became, by the end of the nineteenth
century, split in two once more. This time it was along the lines of political alle-
giance. As Zeldin has argued, while the left admired liberal, intellectual,
anticlerical Germany, and regretted only that this was unfortunately balanced
22 City of Darkness, City of Light
literature and the visual arts things were different. Franz Hessel, who was to
later work on a translation of Proust with his friend Walter Benjamin, pub-
lished a nostalgic account of pre-war life in Paris entitled Pariser Romanze
(1920). In it he evoked what was for him true old Paris not that of the famous
sights, but the secret one we discover in passing old corners (in Gleber, 1999,
95). There were also stimulating exchanges between the Surrealists. The cata-
logue to Paul Klees first exhibition in Paris, for example, had a forward by the
French surrealist writer Louis Aragon. Many French intellectuals also took a
keen interest in the satirical, urban caricatural work of the Berliner, Georg
Grosz.
For the French writer Pierre Mac Orlan, who wrote a preface to the Parisian
Grosz exhibition of 1924, Groszs work spoke of the common situation that the
city dwellers of France and Germany now found themselves in. The social
classes who ten years ago possessed respective traditions, which differenti-
ated them from each other, are now merging in new combinations under the
lights of the street, he wrote. If people since the war can be distinguished
from those that preceded them, it is by their passive obedience to the laws of
speed. (...) The whole of the street and its intermediaries are animated in the
magical, dirty and brutal frenzy of everyday life (in Metken, 1992, 47).1 Along
with the architectural and design links between Le Corbusier and Mal-
let-Stevens and their German counterparts, there was a gradual renewal of in-
terest in German literature with the founding of La Revue dAllemagne in 1927.
Erich Maria Remarques All Quiet on the Western Front was a phenomenal best-
seller. It had sold nearly half a million copies within six months of publication
in 1929 (Weber 1995, 18). Among popular film audiences, the emotional reck-
oning of Verdun, Vision dhistoire (Lon Poirier, 1928) enjoyed enormous
success. The following quotation from the French film trade press of the time
gives, however, a flavour of the still simmering antagonisms. The journalist
has noted how Poiriers film was generally praised in Germany but no men-
tion was made of national culpability. In fact, a Frankfurt newspaper has even
gone so far as to criticise the French attitude towards the war. It is quoted as
saying If there were no French politicians and no French newspapers the
Frenchman would be the most honest man in the world. Well! sniffs the
French journalist, if there hadnt been the Deutschland ber alles mentality,
perhaps the same could be said of a German!2
In many of the films of the 1930s such as Raymond Bernards Les Croix de
bois (1931), mention of the war surfaces directly and indirectly.3 Among the
films I will discuss in detail, it actually forms the core narrative impulse of
Carrefour since the central character is an amnesiac war veteran. War wid-
ows feature in the same film and also in Dans les rues, which signals the fact
that by the middle of the decade, women in the age group between twenty and
24 City of Darkness, City of Light
forty years old outnumbered their male counterparts by more than one million
(Weber 1995, 14). In his account of the French nation in the 1930s, Eugen Weber
even argues that the decade began in August 1914 with the time frame in ques-
tion simply being divided between mainly a sense of aprs guerre and avant
guerre. Although this formulation might be seen as overtly determinist and
certainly benefitting from the privilege of hindsight, it remains true to say that
the effect of war whether it be remembered or anticipated significantly af-
fected the dealings of the French with the Germans over this period. It altered
the ways the French saw themselves in relation to Germany, and the ways the
French then represented themselves to each other through the medium of cin-
ema.
The period leading up to the various departures of the migrs from the Ger-
man film industry to Paris saw the continued rapid expansion of the two natio-
nal capitals. The post First World War era in France was when the nation went
from being a predominantly agrarian society to one in which the majority of its
members could count themselves as urban based. By 1930, 66 per cent of the
population lived in towns (Weber 1995, 37). Similarly, the population of Berlin
went from 2 million residents to almost 4 million between 1910 and 1925 (Kaes
1998, 184). In both cases, the cities populations swelled through migration
from the rural provinces and beyond the borders of the state from the Jewish
communities of central Europe who were then escaping violent waves of per-
secution. Many of the most important filmmakers of Weimar Germany actu-
ally came to Berlin from elsewhere: Fritz Lang from Vienna, F.W. Murnau from
the Ruhr District and G. W. Pabst from Bohemia.
The crucial difference between the two places was the relationship between
an overall history of the city and the timing of this expansion. In the case of the
French capital, modernity already had a set of nineteenth century connota-
tions going back to the official expansion of the city boundaries during the Sec-
ond Empire and the work of Haussmann in redesigning the appearance of the
citys built environment. As the capital of the French nation and the City of the
Revolution, Paris already possessed a vital political, cultural, and architectural
history. Berlin, on the other hand, only became the metropolitan center of Ger-
many in 1871 and thus Germanys particular turn to the city was seen as rep-
resenting something else. Whereas Paris had expanded in a piecemeal fashion,
or had even literally uncoiled, if one looks at the metaphoric possibilities sug-
gested by the circular pattern of the arrondisements on the map, Berlins growth
The City in Context 25
was more linear, seamless, and rapid. Its very reason for being was to suggest
the possibilities of the industrial age. Berlin has not grown; rather it has un-
dergone a transformation. Chicago on the Spree is emerging, wrote Walter
Rathenan in 1899 (in Mller, 1990, 40). As Anton Kaes has suggested, the con-
sequence of this relatively sudden development was that by the mid- to late-
1920s, Berlin was considered the paragon of modern living both intriguing
and terrifying in its tempo, diversity and moral laxity (1998, 186).4 For many
cultural observers, including Siegfried Kracauer, there was an inherent corre-
lation between the characteristics of the modern city and the features of its
most contemporary form of entertainment: the cinema. Both represented a
sense of continuous mobility, rootlessness, nervousness, loss of concentra-
tion, and the resulting relativity and meaningless of traditional values (Kaes,
186).5 For the Berliner Tristan Tzara, the city was even becoming like a serial
film. (...) Events are unravelling so rapidly that I have the impression that the
whole of Germany is acting in front of an enormous lens, he wrote (in Metken
1992, 29). In his review of a key Berlin Straenfilm of the 1920s, Die Strae
(Karl Grne, 1923), Kracauer specifically noted how it conveyed a wordless
and soulless coexistence of directed automobiles and undirected desires (in
Kaes, 187).6
An important distinction between German and French film culture of the
period is thus signified in debates about the nature of the cinematic represen-
tation of social life where the city becomes largely viewed in negative or posi-
tive terms as the locus for a set of questions about work, leisure, gender and
modernity. In his discussion of the internationally successful urban German
cinema of the 1920s and early 1930s, Jonathan Munby has argued Robert
Siodmaks appropriation of the Kammerspielfilm in a film like Strme der
Leidenschaft/Tumultes (1931) was the direct result of a search for an aes-
thetic appropriate to the intimate and interior crises brought on by modern ur-
7
ban life (1996, 78). In a variant on the ways in which Expressionist film-
making externalized the disturbances of the inner psyche through heightened
set design and lighting set-ups, the overtly subjective mobility of the camera in
the Kammerspielfilm projected the intimate psychology of individuals onto a
world of external objects (79). Settings were more naturalistic, less abstract
than the Expressionist model, but in the context of Weimar Berlin, this ex-
ternalised subconscious was hemmed in by the milieu of run-down apart-
ments, producing a characteristically pessimistic, sparse, dark, and claustro-
phobic effect (79). The result, from Munbys perspective is a filmmaking
practice which sees the city not as a neutral site of social documentation, but as
an oppressive state of mind. The physical body of the city actually becomes
one with the protagonists imagined relationship to it.
26 City of Darkness, City of Light
cism. The term asphalt culture was coined to describe the ill-effects of urban
life and the forgetting of the past that the modern city meant. According to the
sociologist and economist Werner Stombart, asphalt culture extended ev-
erywhere, forming a species of human being that leads its life with no genu-
ine affinity with living nature A species with pocket watches, umbrellas, rub-
ber shoes and electric light (in Frisby, 2001, 246). Wilhelm Stapel, editor of
Deutsches Volkstum, argued that Todays battle cry must be The resistance of
the landscape against Berlin(in Natter 1994, 215). Nowhere was this disap-
proving emphasis on the moment more true than in the field of Berlin cabaret
entertainment where songs and performances made witty reference to the
multitudinous phenomena of modernity such as the citys transport system,
cinemas and open-air amusement parks. Its secret was summed up by Der
blaue Engels composer, Friedrich Hollaender. The pithy and topical skepti-
cism of the Berlin cabaret meant, for him, a two-minute song of our times, the
sweetness of love, the heartbeat of unemployment, the bewilderment of poli-
tics [and] the standard-issue uniform of cheap amusement (in Dimendberg,
Jay and Kaes 1994, 566). Erich Kstner, the author of Emil und die Detektive
(1927), meanwhile, complained that it was natural that the cabaret made Berlin
its home. In an astonishingly negative rebuke of its pleasures, he commented
that [t]he metropolis in its natural form is an inhumane place to be and inhu-
mane means are required for it to be endured. (...) Such dreams purify people
for their doings by the light of day (in Dimendberg, Jay and Kaes, 562-3).9
Looking at Paris, on the other hand, means taking on board an already com-
plex and very different representational history. Because of the lack of the in-
tense emotions of blood and soil Romanticism in French culture, the idea of
the city is also less partisan than in the German example. In relation to the met-
aphorical and literal darkness of the backward provinces, Paris has historically
stood for the pleasures of display, sophistication and progressive social change
(Corbin 1996). The French capital from Balzac to Flaubert has always meant an
escape from the stifling boredom of provincial life. There was a thread of mis-
giving about the ill-effects of urban life in a number of French nineteenth cen-
tury literary accounts of the city and industrial change, for example but Paris,
unlike Berlin, had by then a stable tradition of being seen as an approved sym-
bol for the nation. The 1789 revolution was central in consecrating the French
capital as the unified centre of liberty and progressive social and political val-
ues. The centuries of commerce, learning, and infrastructure, not to mention
the heterogeneous influx of residents from different regions, had all produced
a sense of a map which through its distinctive areas could also serve as a
metonymic map for the country as a whole. Modern Germany and American
companies may have been literally harnessing the power of light to dominate
the electrification market and its ancillary industries (including the potential
28 City of Darkness, City of Light
of sound cinema), but Paris continued to stand for the intellectual and political
connotations of light in the metaphorical sense of enlighten ment.
In 1930, we therefore find the French writer Louis Reynaud conducting an
enquiry entitled Lme allemande into the character differences between France
and Germany. His speculations concluded that if the German temperament re-
lied on a knack for combining instinct and organisation, the French could, on
the other hand, be justly celebrated for their elevated sense of taste and reason.
His findings match the racially motivated distinction Norbert Elias was later
to make in ber den Prozess der Zivilisation (1936) between Parisian civilisa-
tion (meaning intellect and artistry) and Berliner Kultur (meaning modern-
day socially minded politics). These thoughts find their echoes in the writings
of the likes of Walter Benjamin and Kracauer, as well as the French surrealists.
They all noted an enthusiasm for the modulated temporal layerings of Pari-
sian existence, and marked this with an acute awareness of the processes of
change.10 This fascination with the passing of time and the fleeting nature of
the modern urban moment goes back of course to Baudelaires seminal
thoughts on the ephemeral, the fugitive [and] the contingent quality of Pari-
sian modernity in The Painter of Modern Life (1995 edition, 12). It also fuels
Louis Aragons and Andr Bretons detailed interlinking of subjective mem-
ory and urban space in their surrealist novels Paysan de Paris (1926) and Nadja
(1926). In his fascinating essay, Analysis of a City Map, also dated 1926,
Kracauer evocatively described the accumulated sense of social inheritance
found in the archetypal Parisian faubourg: Some of the Parisian faubourgs are
giant shelters for all sorts of ordinary people, he wrote. ... The way in which
they have cohabited over the centuries is expressed in the form of these shel-
ters, which is certainly not bourgeois but is not proletarian either, to the extent
that the latter term evokes smokestacks, tenements and highways. It is impov-
erished and humane at the same time (1995, 41). Kracauer could as well be
writing of films such as Dans les rues and Coeur de lilas.
These comparisons have fascinating repercussions. This different cultural
inheritance of the town and country dichotomy meant that the ambivalent im-
age of the city, apparent in so many German films, did not translate well in the
French cinema of the 1930s. There was simply not the same intrinsic disap-
pointment regarding a sense of the loss of national purity. Instead, the rural re-
gions appeared to sit, at least to some extent, with the metropolitan. Indeed,
for Paul Morand who returned from the United States in 1930, horrified by the
impersonal, mechanised and streamlined character of American city life, the
talent of the French was to combine the two. In the past, I wished Paris looked
like New York, he wrote. This is no longer true. (...) While I wrote a few years
ago: France has no choice but to become either American or Bolshevik, I now
believe that we must avoid with all our strength these two precipices. (...) The
The City in Context 29
genius of Paris is precisely that of the meticulous peasant (in Golan, 1995,
81).11 That is not to say that there wasnt a perceived set of differences between
the city and the country in French cultural discourse over the period in ques-
tion. Romy Golan notes a complex vein of tradition and regionalism running
in tandem with more progressive tendencies in the fields of public architec-
ture, design and visual representation. Her argument hinges on the results of
the war between France and Germany. Whilst the Germans, she suggests,
had no choice but to confront the consequences of war, victory gave France
the luxury of a rappel lordre whose political and cultural agenda was largely
aimed at repressing the trauma of war. (...) [There was] a collective ethos
driven toward the restoration of what had been before: a world stilled and a vi-
sion infused by nostalgia and memory (ix). Golan notes a turn to depictions of
rural life in the painting of the period which was mirrored in the regionalism of
writers such as Maurice Barrs and Franois Mauriac and the influential ap-
pointment of the architectural historian Paul Lon as Chef des Services
dArchitecture au Ministre de linstruction Publique et des Beaux Arts who
disliked modern German design because it was too internationalist (in
Golan, 27). There is even a preponderance of painterly depictions of the French
capital by Maurice Utrillo, for example which instead of viewing Paris in
terms of danger and instability ( la Berlin) portrayed the city in terms of a
communal village much in the manner of Ren Clair in Sous les toits de
Paris (1930) and Georges Lacombe in Jeunesse (1934). Indeed, the French
early sound cinema may be seen as a crucial site for the visualisation of a cer-
tain set of depictions of the capital which relied on past notions of Paris. In this
sense, instead of being a place of confrontation with the shock and distur-
bances of modernity as in Berlin, the French cinema auditorium instead be-
came an important site of remembering. The French cinema, crucially, had no
real need for the blood and soil mannerisms of the likes of the German
mountain film genre to act in sharp contrast to the depiction of modern life.
Paris always meant a different sort of home.
One of the critical ways in which French and German interests met and inter-
sected with the industrial model of the United States was over the issue of the
conversion to sound. Indeed, this triangular cultural and economic relation-
ship continued to haunt the paths of the migrs throughout the decade. As
Icart (1974), Andrew (1983, 1995) and Crisp (1993) have all noted, linguistic
frontiers which were formerly of small difference during the silent era sud-
30 City of Darkness, City of Light
ropean film co-operation as one of the means to heal the remaining bitterness
following the First World War. In 1926, the League of Nations actually spon-
sored the first of the Franco-German led International Film Congresses in
Paris.14 These congresses were an important part of the so-called Film Europe
strategy of creating a pan-European film industrial structure to counteract the
perceived hegemony of the American organisations. More meetings followed
in Geneva (1927), Berlin (1928), Paris (1929) and Brussels (1930). At the 1929
gathering, Charles Dulac, vice-president of the Film Board of Trade of France,
summed up the prevailing view. In his mind, there were but two possibilities
for Europe either we must form a European bloc working jointly among our-
selves or we will gradually but surely be colonised by America (in Gomery
and Staiger 1979, 40). As Andrew Higson and Richard Maltby note, the history
of Film Europe was simultaneously one of economic strategy and cultural
practice. On the one hand, there was the very pragmatic form of trade collabo-
ration ... developed in recognition of the need to compete with the American
film industry from the strength of a comparable home market. On the other
hand, Film Europe was a cultural project which engaged with the prevailing
ideas of internationalism. At times, the two ideas intertwined, at times they
were clearly in opposition (1999, 17). Clearly, networks between producers,
directors, tech- nicians and performers were established over this period which
continued to influence the nature of Franco-German film relations throughout
the 1930s. Jacques Feyder, for example, had a contract with DEFU Deutsche
First National to direct a French and German cast in a Berlin studio production
of Thrse Raquin (1928), whilst Cin-Romans financed La Duchesse des
Folies-Bergre (1927) directed by Robert Wiene and shot in Berlin, Vienna and
Paris.15 Extremely influential in fostering cross-border relationships was the Al-
liance Cinmatographique Europenne (A.C.E.), the overseas arm of U.F.A. Es-
tablished in the Spring of 1926, and based in Paris, it served as more than the
main conduit for German export features in the French language markets. Un-
der the leadership of Raoul Ploquin, it was also to be part of the German-fi-
nanced French-language film production phenomenon of the 1930s.
Despite these efforts to produce a pan-European (or more specifically
Franco-German) counterbalast to Hollywood, the fact remains that many of
the previously mentioned collaborations were short-lived. This was due to the
precarious financial position of many French film companies and the use of
American capital to bolster German film interests at the short-term expense of
the French following the terms of the Dawes Plan. One only has to look at
the following sets of production statistics to see the picture of the relative
strengths and weaknesses of the two industries at the end of the 1920s.
32 City of Darkness, City of Light
Film Production
France Germany
1926 84 films 1926 202 films
1927 88 films 1927 241 films
1928 94 films 1928 221 films
1929 52 films 1929 185 films
16
Film Exports
France to Germany Germany to France
1926 23 films 1926 33 films
1927 28 films 1927 91 films
1928 23 films 1928 122 films
1929 15 films 1929 130 films
19
rope was not to take the path of the false international film. A director
shouldnt imitate the things which are better done by the directors of other
countries, he claimed. Each country must preserve its national character
with elements which represent the best it has to offer. (...) A director should
never forget his nationality. This was also the point of view of the second
Congress of the International Federation of Cinema Directors (3-7 June 1929)
which at the same time stressed the need for co-operative foundations for the
battle to resist the onslaught of American-led competition.20 So it was that in
the absence of significant domestically financed sound conversion and pro-
duction, Tobis in Paris was seen as French film cultures best hope in stabilis-
ing a sense of nationally specific norms of sound film representation. The in-
fluential trade voice of P.A. Harl called Tobis in Epinay our European
champion. Lets hope, he said, that this brilliant outsider will be ready
quickly enough to lock horns with the efforts of the Americans and allow us
21
(my emphasis) to produce (...) the first fine French language films. This must
have been the thinking behind the recruitment of Ren Clair who started work
for Tobis on September 15th having failed to complete the early MLV Prix de
beaut.22 Clair developed prestige level productions such as the hugely suc-
cessful and influential Sous les toits de Paris which is itself an interesting in-
stance of the complexity of Franco-German film relations in the early sound
period. Despite the fact that Sous les toits de Paris was evidently a top-level
project, with superbly designed sets of the city by the Russian set designer
Lazarre Meerson to showcase the world of the ordinary citizens of Paris, it
originally failed at the box office in its country of production. It was, ironically,
only after a gala presentation in Berlin and positive critical reception from the
Germans that it then re-opened in Paris to subsequent success.23 What is also
fascinating, reading the contemporary reports of this phenomenon, is the way
that the success of the film was perceived to be due to a combination of factors.
It was not just the design and character of the reconstruction of Paris that ap-
parently mattered. What was equally significant was the way that this then
showcased the perceived splendours and gentle sweetness24 of the French
language itself.
Tobis was not the only foreign company to recognise the financial potential
of the chance for audiences of hearing the cadences of their native tongue
matched to the moving image. Between 1929 and 1930, Paramount spent $10
million equipping the Joinville complex in Paris that had been owned by Cin-
Romans with six sound studios ready for the production of MLV sound ver-
sions. The company Production started in April 1930 under the supervision of
Robert T. Kane. As Vincendeau (1988) and Courtade (1991) have argued, MLVs
were a significant, early but briefly lived method of overcoming the cultural
and economic barriers presented by the arrival of sound in the global film mar-
The City in Context 35
tionship which prefigured the later wave of previously Berlin based filmmak-
ers who came to work in Paris after 1933. As well as the expected numbers of
German sound technicians who were coming to work in many French studios
at the time, Joinville also meant a good deal of on the ground co-operation be-
tween other sorts of film professionals. A report from the Berlin based Para-
mount conference of 1931, confirms that only 60 per cent of personnel working
on German language productions were German.29 It follows that there must
have been significant contact between French and German practitioners.
Witta-Montrobert notes how the Germans, in particular were preoccupied
with matters of technique (36). This supports Andrews argument that the
chief long-term effect of [Tobis and Paramount] (...) was the opportunity and
training they provided for hundreds of French artisans to learn a craft that they
could carry with them to the numerous feeble but native production compa-
nies that inevitably sprouted on the newly bulldozed terrain [of the French
film industry] (1995, 99). In any case, however, the experiment was, in fact,
short-lived. Tobis almost ceased production after 1933 and Paramount wound
down operations the same year due to the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the ris-
ing popularity of dubbing.
In 1929, Le Courrier cinmatographique commented that all films that are pro-
duced in Paris bear the hallmark of that indefinable thing that none can imitate
The City of Light, capital of the world!30 Yet, at the same time in Berlin, both
the U.F.A. studios and Tobis were already starting out to make French sound
fictional features as part of the MLV phenomenon, many of which were also,
ostensibly, set in Paris. In 1934, A.C.E. even decided, under the auspices of
Raoul Ploquin, to establish a department at the Berlin Neubabelsburg studios
specialising in films made by an all-French crew.31 At first, these were to be
MLVs but from 1936 they included exclusively French only single-language
productions such as Gueule damour (Jean Grmillon, 1937) and LEntra-
neuse (Albert Valentin, 1938). The speed with which the U.F.A. Neubabels-
burg studios converted to multi-language sound film production had im-
pressed French film professionals. Gregor Rabinowitsch who had come to
Paris in 1923 as the disciple of Franco-German collaboration, and was co-
director of Cin-Alliance with No Bloch, noted how directors in Berlin now
had at their disposition an instrument of great beauty the studios of U.F.A.
(...) which in just six months have been completely transformed and equipped
The City in Context 37
for the talking picture. (...) To write off the costs of a full-length sound film it
will be necessary to shoot the same version in 3 or 4 different languages. And
for that, it will be necessary to hire foreign personnel.32 A steady flow of
French speaking personnel, such as Albert Prjean and Annabella, thus ar-
rived on short contracts in the Berlin studios to produce French language ver-
sions of German productions or German versions of French scripts. Through-
out this period, the Cinmatographie Franaise had a regular section noting the
new arrivals to Berlin from Paris. On 19 September 1931, for example, the trade
weekly noted that Yves Mirande and Charles Boyer were staying in the Htel
Eden, Henri Chomette was staying at the Htel Alhambra and Florelle was in
the Pension Impriale. The French film press of the early sound period widely
acknowledged that the German cinema industry remained worthy of the same
critical respect and admiration won through the impact of prestige U.F.A. pro-
jects such as Metropolis (Fritz Lang, 1927) and Die Bchse der Pandora
(G.W. Pabst, 1929). In a production report from Berlin on the set of the French
MLV Coup de feu laube (1932), Antonin Artaud was typical in praising the
systematic facility with which the U.F.A. production system could engage in
producing high quality popular cinematic entertainment. The Germans
make commercial films in the best sense of the word, he commented. Their
films are of a high technical and artistic quality and being also very human
they naturally sell very easily.33 This account is substantiated by Andr
Beuclers impression that the Berlin workshops do things well: the photogra-
phy is clever and precise, the sound excellent, the editing sophisticated (...) In
all technical matters, our neighbours make no compromises; near enough is
not good enough (in Crisp, 179). The music hall star Florelle, whose first films
were shot in the German capital, also commented that the reason working in
the Berlin studios was so agreeable was because everything is organised there
in such a precise fashion. She refused, however, to go further and claim, like
many did, that actual German technical prowess outshone the work of their
French counterparts. I cant really say, in my opinion, that German directors
or camera operators are superior to ours, she suggested. The superiority of
certain German films lies principally with German organisation which knows
how to make the best of the same means that we, in fact, possess ourselves.34
For the novelist and screenwriter Joseph Kessel, a frequent commentator on
Berlin affairs in the French press, German organisation even spread to the rep-
resentation of the social order. In his review of Siodmaks Tumultes, he
claimed that what gives the underworld [in the film] a unique and obsessive
character is the cohesion with which its members are placed in a network (...)
[there is] a total discipline which creates a unit of all these ex-convicts and
strong-heads.35
38 City of Darkness, City of Light
Whilst this discipline was discussed in largely admiring terms, it was none-
theless also the source of a certain amount of tension during production. Cul-
tural differences were reported over meal times. As Alexandre Arnoux point-
ed out in a report from Neubabelsburg, the Germans considered eating as a
subsidiary activity to the practicalities of solving a particular task. The French,
on the other hand, saw lunch as an important opportunity to share and discuss
ideas over the communality of food preparation and consumption.36 There was
also the matter of different modes of performance. In an interesting commen-
tary on the distinctiveness of both German and French acting styles, a critic
from the Berlin-based Der Kinematograph, noticed how French acting talents in
the German capital tended to perform in a more theatrical and complicated
manner than their German counterparts. Their style was less naturalistic.37
His comments point to the obvious differences in professional back- grounds.
Many of the French stars working in Germany were also engaged in the transi-
tion from the music-hall to the cinema. But these remarks also suggest a certain
difference in the conception of the representation of everyday life. We should
take into account the differences in the delivery of words, in the expression of a
gesture, the article continued. Romance actors sometimes tend to pathos
where we tend to a form of sober objectivity.38
Importantly, these differences extended to the problems regarding the rep-
resentation of the city. The journalist and cartoonist Pol Rab, in a report on the
French MLV Mon Coeur incognito (Mandref Nos and Andr-Paul Antoine,
1930), couldnt help describing Berlin as a grey and provincial town which
despite the best intentions was unable to conceive cinematically the character
and elusive atmosphere of Paris on screen. A Parisian interior just isnt a
Berlin interior, he declared. The experienced set designer would notice a
thousand differences between the two of them.39 Whilst it is true that this kind
of tension seemed to focus on certain issues of national pride, the key point re-
mains that the governing discourse regarding German cinema was the acuity
with which German cinema professionals be they actors or camera operators
could render a psychological intensity to the depiction of the ordinary reali-
ties of city life. If one returns to Artauds comments on Coup de feu laube,
which as the name suggests was a police thriller, the actors most significant
observation was the existence of a group of camera operators who were with-
out equal in their talents. They research the logical effects of light, he no-
ticed. They try to create a kind of luminous psychological ambiance which
matches the state of mind of the scene. (...) You wouldnt be able to imagine the
extent of the care they take to achieve picturesque detail and revealing psy-
chology. For some, this rendering of light was ill-suited to the modes of per-
formance. Florelle commented that she would have preferred her work on
The City in Context 39
Paris was a site of exile for many of the dispossessed of Europe even before the
tenets of the French Revolution enshrined the notion of France as the country
of human liberties. As Schor (1989) has suggested, this search for liberty in-
volved many variations of the word ranging from the material to the moral;
from the intellectual and artistic to the political. As far as the French film indus-
try was concerned, the wave of emigration from the U.S.S.R. encompassed all
of these definitions. In discussing the importance of pre-1933 emigrations to
Paris, it is important to recognise the contribution of the Russians. The trajecto-
ries of these migr filmmakers may have preceded the different journeys from
Berlin that took place in the early 1930s, but the two passages can not be seen in
isolation. Each grouping developed networks which inform the overall tan-
gled processes of migr film production during the late silent and early sound
period. Victor Trivas, for example, who ended up directing the early Poetic Re-
alist melodrama Dans les rues, was one of the original White Russian migrs
in the 1920s and came back to Paris via Germany in 1933. The Russian producer
Michael Safra, after working in Berlin, also emerged in Paris to produce fea-
tures for Berlin migr Robert Siodmak; and Gregor Rabinovitch, another key
Russian producer, went to Germany but returned to France in 1933 and,
amongst other films, oversaw Quai des brumes (Marcel Carn, 1938) with
migr Eugen Schfftan as cinematographer.
The Russian immigrants of the 1920s were fleeing the Russian Revolution.
In this sense, their arrival in the French capital was fuelled by a different set of
political priorities than those filmmakers who left Germany after the rise of
Hitler in 1933. Just as the waves of emigration from Berlin were enabled by
various pre-existing structures of exchange and co-operation between France
and Germany, so the Russians were assisted by the fact that the French film in-
dustry had long-standing links with that part of the world. Gaumont was well
established in Russia before the beginning of the First World War, and Joseph
Ermoliev (later Ermolieff) had begun work as a technical assistant at Paths
Moscow branch. The departure of Ermoliev and fellow filmmakers such as
Alexandre Volkoff, Ivan Mosjoukine, Nicolas Toporkoff, Alexandre Lochakoff
and Nathalie Lissenko was not sudden. Many had worked in Yalta in the Cri-
mea between 1918-1919 after leaving Moscow, and although they fled Odessa
40 City of Darkness, City of Light
when the city was captured by the Bolsheviks early in 1920, they knew, thanks
to Ermolievs preparatory visits to the French capital, that opportunities
awaited them on arrival in Paris. Ermoliev set up La Socit Ermolieff-Cinma,
based in the former Path studios at Montreuil, with partners Alexandre
Kamenka and No Bloch, but in 1922, he moved to Berlin leaving Kamenka
and Bloch to establish Les Films Albatros. What followed is an indication of
the close proximity between the French and German film industries in this pe-
riod of intense competition with the increasingly hegemonic model of the
United States. Two years later, Vladimir Wengeroff, from the German-based
film consortium Westi, lured Bloch and many of his personnel to set up a sub-
sidiary of Westi to be based in Paris called Cin-France-Film. Westi, however,
faced financial collapse in the late summer of 1925. Bloch, therefore, moved to
set up an internationally minded Franco-German production outlet, Cin-
Alliance, with his former colleague Gregor Rabinovitch, now in Berlin, and the
French production company Socit des Cinromans. Kamenkas Les Films
Albatros continued to make features through to the 1930s. Many of these films
were by prominent directors of the period and include such titles as Un cha-
peau de paille dItalie (Ren Clair, 1927) and Les Bas-fonds (Jean Renoir,
1936).41 In much the same manner as the succeeding migrs from Germany,
the Russians actually concentrated on making French films despite contin-
ued nods to their national heritage. As Albera notes, [t]he general attitude of
the Russians concerned both the desire to integrate themselves, to be the guar-
antee of modernity, and the wish to meet the wishes of the society that wel-
comed them. In other words, to legitimate the stereotypical folkloric and exotic
image that France had of Russia (1995, 80). Although one can observe traces
of the Russian traditional cultural heritage in the continuing vogue for Slavic
melodramas of the 1930s, the Russian migrs should also be remembered for
their ability to adapt to contemporaneous norms of French cultural representa-
tion. Russian set and costume designers, such as Lazarre Meerson and Boris
Bilinsky, worked with the likes of Marcel LHerbier and Jacques Feyder on
French-based productions, which then went on to be well received on the ex-
port market as models of French excellence. The German trade weekly
Lichtbildbhnes Paris corespondent believed, for example, that Albatross Feu
Mathias Pascal (Marcel LHerbier, 1925)] definitely belong[ed] among the
few films of French origin which deserve to be placed in the same class with
the best American and German productions(in Thompson 1989, 55). For
many, the work of Lazarre Meerson, in particular, was a central influence on
the mode of 1930s French urban representation which saw Paris as an intimate
village. Andrew (1995) claims that Meerson, particularly in Tobiss Sous les
toits de Paris, downsized the picturesque vistas of the city of light by con-
structing its more picturesque back alleys (179). A production report, from
The City in Context 41
the set of the film, comments on the same thing. Special facilities have been
installed to allow Ren Clair to both take up the panoramic view and comb
each of the houses to study more closely the lives of their inhabitants.42 This
sense of scale concurs with the previously noted French aversion to the domi-
nant Weimar German model of urban representation which saw the city as
everyones nightmare (Andrew, 180).
had established a presence (in terms of production, that is, since most of them
were already present as distributors) in Europe: Warner Brothers, Universal,
RKO, Paramount, United Artists and MGM in London; Paramount, United
Artists and Fox in Paris; Fox and United Artists in Berlin. Then, secondly, the
effects of the Great Depression were still being felt with a noticeable downturn
in receipts leading to the closure of a number of cinemas. It was no wonder
then that a number of important German-based filmmakers decided to take
the opportunity to move and work with their non-business sense minded
French contemporaries in Paris.
Many of those who made the journey to the French capital took advantage
of the pre-existing network of links between the two countries. One of the key
staging posts, apart from Paramount and Tobis, was the newly established pro-
duction company owned by Adolphe Osso called Socit des Films Osso (See
Appendix Two). Osso had resigned from his influential position as Chief Ad-
ministrator of Paramount Pictures in the United States at the beginning of the
decade and returned to France where for a few years his company sustained an
ambitious programme of sound features, many of which were developed by
migr personnel. In May 1931, No Bloch was named Director of Production
and his links with the German film industry, via his previous partnership with
Gregor Rabinovitch, must surely have been useful in the recruitment of such
names as Carl Lamac, Heinz Hilpert and Max Neufeld. Bloch was also able to
make use of family connections and, the same year, put his nephew, Anatol
(later Anatole) Litvak, under contract. Looking at the Osso filmography, one
also notes the names of other key Russians such as Victor Tourjansky. By the
end of 1931, the Cinmatographie franaise was able to note a significant number
of foreign filmmakers who were now operative in France. As well as the Ger-
man names already mentioned, these included the Italians Carmine Gallone,
the Swiss Robert Wyler, the Czech Karel Anton and the Hungarians Alexander
Korda and Paul Fjos.45 The number of overseas personnel working on French
language film production in France was viewed with consternation in some
quarters. A shrill editorial in the Cinmatographie franaise entitled No More
Foreigners in Our Country! argued the case that although foreign filmmakers
were providing an indispensable service, there must be stricter regulation of
the number of native French personnel working on any one production.46 For
others, it was a case of the preservation of the right of French filmmakers to
make films based on cultural properties of French origin. In his memoirs, Mar-
cel LHerbier recalls his indignation that French literature should exercise so
powerful an attraction on foreign directors that a Tourjansky should direct
LAiglon, Korda Marius, Litvak Coeur de lilas [and] Fejos Fantomas (in Crisp,
178). Yet the service that many of these filmmakers provided was indeed in-
dispensable precisely because as foreigners they could enhance rather than
The City in Context 43
subvert the needs of the French industry at a crucial period of transition. The
interaction of industrial and national-based factors in this wave of pre-1933
emigration can be examined more closely by turning to two individual studies
Anatole Litvak and Kurt Courant.
53
mes from the cinema, it declared. This is true, especially in the many formally
inventive links between the various scenes. The virtuoso crane shot which in-
troduces the world of the street in Coeur de lilas, and which I discuss later, is
another indication of Litvaks method.
The second aspect of this notion of real cinema concerns the specific facil-
ity of film, as a popular entertainment, to draw upon the authentic immedia-
cies of the social world for its dramatic narratives. Like a number of migrs,
Litvak was particularly interested in the urban milieux of his adopted environ-
ment. In this sense his concerns matched with uncanny precision those out-
lined in an important article written by Francis Carco in 1930.54 Following the
success of his screenplay for Paris la nuit (Henri Diamont-Berger, 1930),
Carco made a call for French cinema to make films of atmosphere which
made use of cinemas ability to register, in the minutest detail, aspects of the
urban everyday.55 Exactly one year later, Litvak himself authored a piece enti-
tled The Film of Atmosphere must replace the 100 per cent talking feature.56
Central to Carco and Litvaks concerns was the sense that the visual inspection
of the camera created a spectatorial relationship which differed from that of
the connection between a live theatrical audience and a stage play. Carco sug-
46 City of Darkness, City of Light
gested that the cinema was less collective and more direct, meaning that the
partnership between the viewer and the screen was as immediate and intense
as the intimate bond created between the mind of a novelist and his or her
reader. Consequently, what mattered for both figures was the evocation of so-
cial atmosphere and detail over the display and artifice of spectacle and per-
formance. Carco, for example, wrote in his article about a subsequent film pro-
ject which would draw upon his personal knowledge of the men and women
of certain obscure corners of Paris whilst Litvak, according to the memoirs
of the assistant producer on Coeur de lilas, Ren Lucot (1984), made exten-
sive searches for authentic Parisian locations prior to shooting the film. Even in
the scenes which were shot in the studio, Litvak uses numerous apparently
non-professional faces to provide background flavour to the narrative.
The third sense in which the question of Litvaks real cinema related to
the concerns of the day is an extension of the points made so far. Litvak matters
as an important case study of one of the early 1930s film migrs because of the
level of visual sophistication and training that he was able to bring to a natio-
nal cinema searching for a way of competing with the models of Berlin and
Hollywood film production. Litvak, simply, was able to bring the proficiency
of his German training to the Parisian film studio. Lucot, for example, recalls
Litvaks extensive preparations for the previously mentioned key traveling
crane shot in Coeur de lilas which introduces the atmospheric milieu of the
quartier for the first time. In her memoirs, Witta-Montobert (1980, 56) also
makes the point that Litvak dressed himself with great consideration. This
finesse was found again in the way that he very rarely mishandled performers
and technicians, she observed. He presented a familiar, solid impression
whilst on set but this did not prevent him from being demanding. All his films
were meticulously prepared. Most of the scriptwriters he worked with had
been formed in the German school they worked with extraordinary care,
leaving nothing to chance, checking the script for the smallest detail. (...)
Litvak made his plans in collaboration, then he let his co-workers edit the dia-
logue. (...) Once the script was done, he checked it and modified it depending
on the kinds of lens he wished to use. All of this points also to close levels of
collaboration which can be examined by turning to Litvaks key migr
co-worker, the cinematographer Kurt Courant.
As in the case of Anatole Litvak, there has been very little written on Kurt (later
Curt or Curtis) Courant despite his important contribution to the French cin-
The City in Context 47
ema of the 1930s. His first full-length film made in France was also Coeur de
lilas although he had made French language MLVs in Berlin after the coming
of sound (See Appendix Four). Unlike Litvak, he was a native German. He had
started making films in 1917 he co-directed Hilde Warren und der Tod
(1917) with Joe May and in Germany worked with a number of names such as
Fritz Lang and Hans Steinhoff who were to leave for France later with the rise of
Hitler. In a short memoir of his silent period of filmmaking, Courant recalls how
he learnt the dramatic and emotional possibilities of the moving picture me-
dium. I began to look upon photography not as the mere recording of a scene
but as an integral part of the drama, he wrote. Hamlet (Glade, 1920), in partic-
ular made him aware of the unrecognised possibilities of creative cinematogra-
phy (1956, 18). Courant also had Italian connections. He worked with an Italian
director, Palermi, in Germany, and after Coeur de lilas, he was the cinematog-
rapher on Carmine Gallones Un Fils dAmrique (1932) shot in Paris.
Courant went back to Berlin in 1932 although, by the end of the year, he had
returned to the French capital to set up temporary residence at the Htel
Napolon. He did briefly visit Germany the following year but, as a letter pub-
lished in Cinmatographie Franaise later in 1933 makes clear; by now, he saw
Paris as his home. The letter is somewhat curious. It seems at pains to prove
that Courant was not exactly part of the growing tide of politically motivated
migrs who were beginning to cause some consternation in the French stu-
dios. Yet the truth was that Courant was Jewish and so he actually falls into
both camps of migrs who came to work in Paris he worked in France at
times for both economic and political reasons. It was not without interest or
feeling that I read the article in your latest issue devoted to French and foreign
filmmakers, the letter says. I wish to inform you that I have been resident in
France since December 1932 but I was not mentioned in your list of foreign op-
erators who have been resident in France from the 1st of May 1933. I also want
to add that I always work with a French First Assistant.57 By saying this, Cou-
rant was alluding to the widespread fear that talented and well-esteemed
newcomers from the Berlin studios, once installed in Paris, would pose a
threat to French job prospects. There was, certainly, a broadly held view that
German cinematographers such as himself and compatriot Eugen Schfftan,
were responsible for a perceived German look. In 1931, for example, a re-
view of Courants LHomme qui assassina (Kurt Bernhardt, 1931) had found
that if the film had a fault, it was because the atmosphere is too German. (...)
the photography has conceived both the interiors and the full daylight exteri-
ors in clair-obscur .58 Again and again on his arrival in France, Courants atten-
tion to the singular effects of lighting techniques was signalled by commenta-
tors. In Cette vieille canaille there is indeed evidence of a deliberate
exploration of the way different lighting sources may be exploited for dra-
48 City of Darkness, City of Light
matic purpose. In Le Jour se lve (Marcel Carn, 1939) the steam from passing
trains is specifically lit for its atmospheric potential. Yet this German visual
style was to be one of the greatest contributions that the migrs actually made
to 1930s French cinema, in general, and the representation of Paris, in particu-
lar. In this sense, Courant was right to stress his affiliations with French
filmmaking interests. He is a fascinating example of the way in which many of
the migrs worked in Paris by fitting in and enhancing the development of
native production by at the same time being different.
Courant, like his other German compatriots, was different because of his
technically astute understanding of the narrative possibilities of relating char-
acter, space and decor within the frame through the control and direction of
lighting. As Philippe Roger (1991, 117) has suggested in his general discussion
of the German camera operators in France in the 1930s, the key to this was the
simultaneous concentration and dispersal of light within the shot. On the one
hand, light was directed so that blacks and whites were reinforced at the ex-
pense of neutral and even lighting arrangements. Strong light sources meant a
kind of sculpting effect within the space of the image. This often produced
harsh contrasts between illumination and ink-black darkness so that the con-
tours and outlines of facial features or items of the decor were dramatically de-
fined. On the other hand, light was also actually carefully dispersed so that the
direction of a particular light source was obscured in favour of a more diffuse
and suggestive use of shadow. This offered multiple possibilities regarding the
creation of space and depth in the image and the situating of the actor in rela-
tion to the design of the set in the studio. Courant himself was particularly
known for the way he worked to soften the texture of this ambient light
through the use of fine silk fabric which was attached to the numerous small
projectors he used.
Courant is especially interesting as a case-study because of the important
role he played in the future direction of French film output. In particular, he
was, as he has already suggested himself, adept at playing a teacherly role to
native cinematographers. The benefit of being considered German was also
that he could pass on the fruits of his own indigenous training. This is an im-
portant point. The relationship, for example, between the creative use of dif-
fuse and pointed light sources was German partly only because of the vast
financial and material resources of the German studios. A heightened degree
of proficiency and expertise with the available technology had been managed
due to industrial strength. Lighting technology had developed rapidly in the
late silent era and Berlin was able to invest in the skills needed to manipulate
the various projectors now available. As well as knowing how to differentiate
effectively between the older and stronger arc lighting and the softer potential
of recent incandescent lamp sources, German technicians such as Courant
The City in Context 49
were also skilled in the potential of new film stocks. The widespread introduc-
tion of panchromatic film from 1927 onwards allowed a far more subtle palette
of greys and washes which proved to be of great potential regarding the illu-
mination of the urban milieu. The fame of the German camera operators was
such in France that Courants fellow future migr Eugen Schfftan actually
advertised the new Eastman Kodak film with G.W. Pabst in the French film
press. This meant that when the German lighting migrs arrived to work in
Paris, they were seen as advantageous to the future growth of the indigenous
industry.
This necessity of this pedagogical function, as Andrew (1995, 177) has sug-
gested, was symptomatic of the lack of any consistent artisanal studio-based
learning along the lines of the model of the American corporations in Holly-
wood. Younger French cinematographers were obliged to develop their skills
through temporary mentoring relationships which varied from one produc-
tion to the other. Throughout the 1930s, before and after his interludes in Eng-
land between 1933 and 1936, Courant consistently worked with native assis-
tant camera operators such as Charles Bauer, Jacques Natteau, Andr Bac and
Maurice Pecqueux. This amounted to a form of non-formalised instruction. In
his memoirs, the set designer Georges Wakhvitch concurred. I was lucky
enough to know the great Germans, such as Courant and Planner, who formed
the whole group of people like Matras, Kelber, etc., he said. Our cinematog-
raphers were practically all taught by these people. We decorators also had
alot to learn. (...) The lighting, the acting, the intelligence behind the scenarios
[of the German films of our youth] was devastating. For us, it was a revelation
(in Crisp, 377).
Claude Renoir, for example, was Courants assistant on Jean Renoirs cele-
brated adaptation of Zolas La Bte humaine (1938). The deputy might well
have been impressed by the virtuoso way in which light is modelled by Cou-
rant in the film for dramatic purpose. The cinematography makes full use of
the aesthetic potential of reflective surfaces like water, window panes, shiny
black fabric and mirror glass. At key moments in the narrative, psychological
tensions registering on the faces of its main protagonists are enhanced by ex-
pressive abstract patterning. In an important review of the film, Emile
Vuillerme returns to the themes introduced by Carco and Litvak earlier. In so
doing, he highlights the way that Courants Germanic visual style actually
served the purpose of such a prestige, ostensibly French production.
Vuillerme describes how the cinematography of the film reminds him of the
work emanating from the Berlin studios in the late silent period. In his mind,
however, this is proper because the subject of the film is noir. Indeed, noir is
currently the colour in fashion in our studios.59 Vuillerme then goes on to
make a fascinating comparison between the success of this visual darkness
50 City of Darkness, City of Light
and the novelistic qualities of the author on which the film is based. He sug-
gests that the art of Zola [itself] is essentially cinematographic. His realism
(...) is exactly that of a cameraman.60
For the thousands of German-based migrs who decided to leave the country
after the rise of Hitler in 1933, the decision to emigrate was determined by
motives which were at once political, moral, emotional and psychological
(Palmier 1990, 143). The situation for many German directors, actors, techni-
cians and producers had been worsening throughout the early years of the
1930s as the Nazi propaganda machine steadily produced diatribes against the
perceived Jewish bias of the German film industry. In one 1932 pamphlet, the
National Socialist Party claimed that Germanys motion picture distribution
companies were 81 per cent Jewish run (in McGilligan 1997, 169). In early
1933, Joseph Goebbels went so far as to call for a boycott of all Jewish busi-
nesses. Just over a week after the Nazis seized power in the March 3rd elec-
tions, Goebbels set up the Ministerium fr Volksaufklrung und Propaganda
(National Ministry for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda). At the same
time, because of this political tide, film trade relations between France and
Germany were also showing signs of obvious strain. German press articles, re-
ported in Cinmatographie Franaise, still tried to stress the mutual interests of
the German and French film-going publics despite the ongoing difficulties in-
volved in the technicalities of economic co-operation. The charm of Anna-
bella and Miltons good humour had been called Frances best diplomatic as-
sets by Film Kurier.61 Yet, in March 1933, Bernards Les Croix de bois was
suddenly banned from further distribution in German cinemas. A spate of na-
tionalistic revenge films62 such as Blutendes Deutschland (Carl Froelich,
1933) was noted by the French with great anxiety. Given this background of
rising national chauvinism, it was not surprising that the new German govern-
ment moved swiftly to make an imprint on such a key feature of cultural pro-
duction as the film industry.
The now infamous gathering of DACHO (the Association of German Film
Producers), chaired by Goebbels, took place at the Hotel Kaiserhof on 28
March 1933. According to Michel Gorel, then a reporter in Berlin, Goebbels
was dressed in a brown shirt and displayed a pronounced Napoleonic air.
Speaking to a vast assembly of German film employees, he complained bit-
terly that they were making licentious films.63 What he meant was that the
The City in Context 51
national purity of German film culture was being tainted. You are employing
the French and the Jews, he reportedly said, according to Gorel. You are sab-
otaging the German renaissance and all the work of the Fhrer. Ive decided to
keep a close eye on you and that is why I am grouping all the German film
companies into one vast syndicate with myself in charge.64 Goebbels aim was
to purge the German cinema of all of its undesirable elements. In another re-
port, he was quoted to have said that the cause of the crisis in film isnt eco-
nomic, it is moral. The German cinema needs new men, new artists, new forces
and new subjects. The cinema must evolve with the times.65 Consequently, the
next day after the meeting, U.F.A. set about firing all its known Jewish employ-
ees and a formal boycott of Jewish filmmakers was instituted on April 1st. A
week later, in the German Film-Kurier, Gorel noted at least 4 new films with
marked Hitleresque themes already in development.
Kurt Bernhardt, the film director, was at the Kaiserhof meeting and in his
memoirs he remembers the room being filled with Nazi stormtroopers. I had
arrived with my girlfriend Trude von Molo, star of LHomme qui assassina
which I had just finished shooting, he wrote. She was a very beautiful
woman and Goebbels wanted to greet her in person. Whilst he approached us,
I asked Trude What should we do? She replied, Lets get out (in Elsaesser
and Vincendeau (eds.) 1983, 12-13). Bernhardt was one of many to take an
early train out of the country though he did return briefly, with specific per-
mission, to shoot some of the exterior sequences of Le Tunnel (1933). The im-
mediate decision to leave has, however, been over glamourised by some. This
is true in the notable case of Fritz Lang whose own departure narrative will be
recounted in more detail in Chapter Five. From Jan-Christopher Horaks ac-
count, it appears that the Nazis were aware that the sudden withdrawal of
Jewish money would have a disastrous effect on the German film industry but
he is wrong to suggest that there were no new films produced in the Summer
of 1933 involving Jewish filmmakers (1996, 375). Although many had left
Germany, some like Ludwig Berger and Joe May were still working on French
language MLVS in Berlin in July before their departure.66 The idea of hordes of
people getting on the first train out, therefore, seems to be an exaggeration. It
was not until July 14th that a temporary Reich Film Guild (Filmkammer) was
instituted with a permanent model coming into effect as late as November 1st.
Horak points out that although Aryan ancestry was obligatory, exceptions
were made in the early months of the enterprise. Indeed, as late as July, the
German government seemed to be keen to persuade some of those who had
temporarily deserted the Reich to return. In a circular publicised in the French
film trade press, Goering, the German Minister for the Interior, noted the fact
that numerous German subjects belonging to the film industry have gone to
Paris in search of work in the studios there. Most of their names are known and
52 City of Darkness, City of Light
they figure on a blacklist. If they do not reply to the letter of reintegration, that
they can obtain from the Ministry of the Interior, they will lose their nationality
and their possessions.67 Leaving, evidently, was not a simple matter. As
Palmier (1990, 143) sensitively notes, the decision to emigrate was affected by
very diverse objective factors which included the material and intellectual
capacity to abandon Germany in an attempt to construct a new existence
abroad. Many migrs even believed that they were going to return soon. Al-
fred Dblin, the author of Berlin Alexanderplatz, for example, thought that Na-
zism was just a storm that would not last (in Palmier, 146). A significant
number of immediate dpartees in the early months of 1933 returned to Ger-
many from France once their tourist visas had expired. Lotte Eisner, the promi-
nent film critic, was, however, one of the few who felt differently. In one inter-
view, she movingly recalls having to abandon everything; even all her books.
I knew that I wouldnt be coming back in a hurry, she said. Lots of intellec-
tuals thought that Nazism would only last a few weeks. From the beginning, I
was more realistic (in Badia (ed.) 1982, 299).
French Jewry was emancipated during the French Revolution. During the
course of the nineteenth century, at least on a certain level, it had begun to view
itself as distinctive but also somewhat assimilated into the structures of every-
day French society. New Jewish migrants, however, continued to arrive
throughout the century, particularly from Germany. Most noticeable was the
flood of exiles mainly from Alsace and Lorraine after the annexation of these
provinces by Germany in 1871. These migrants settled in the areas around St.
Paul, Bastille, Rpublique, as well as Belleville. They were later followed by
migrants from Poland, the Ukraine and Lithuania. As Weinburg points out,
Jewish society in the 1930s was therefore, in fact, divided between older gener-
ations of immigrants who were able to maintain a bourgeois existence through
commercial and industrial interests and a secondary tier of former Eastern Eu-
ropean, skilled, artisanal workers from the textiles and furniture trades. Like
the varied population it served, he argues, Jewish organisational life in the
1930s was a patchwork quilt of competing identities and solutions to the Jew-
ish question (1977, 22).
The central component of this Jewish question was thus the degree to
which Jews could act and be perceived as French. This attempt to settle cul-
tural difference and attempt to fit in also lies at the heart of the ways in which
the migr filmmakers of the 1930s operated in relation to the representation of
Paris. Even at the time of the Dreyfus affair, there were distinguishable strands
of opinion about the place of Jews in national life. For the older generations of
Parisian Jews, integration meant that fidelity to French identity could work
alongside religious affiliation to the remarkable extent that, in some quarters,
anti-Semitism, could actually be seen as a German import. Frances estab-
lished Jewry perceived themselves as different from more recent Jewish arriv-
als from Alsace and Lorraine, while in right-wing discourse, there was an im-
portant conflation of anti-German and anti-Semitic sentiment. An example of
this confusion was the writing of the right-wing journalist and commentator
Edouard Drumont who disseminated the image of the Jew as [both ]the new-
comer to France and the quintessential German (Hyman 1986, 14). This ten-
dency to exaggerate the differences between old and new between having
roots and being uprooted was exacerbated during the early years of the
twentieth century, particularly with the influx of skilled workers from the Jew-
ish cultures of Eastern Europe. The image persisted, however, of the relation-
ship between Jewishness and being German and this duality undoubtedly fu-
elled the elements of xenophobia which greeted the likes of Robert Siodmak on
their arrival on French soil.
An important subsidiary element to the continuing critical debates about
the place of Jews in relation to French culture, and Paris in particular, was the
contention that Jews were perceived as symbols of the city (...) and of indus-
54 City of Darkness, City of Light
sis of the critical practices of the right-wing film critic Lucien Rebatet, Faulkner
demonstrates how this historical conflation between the Jewish migrant and
urban cosmopolitanism worked within the specific terrain of film culture of
the 1930s.68 He suggests that Rebatets reviews [reveal] that the Jew is the
figure of heterogeneity (1992, 145). The word Jewish thus became an em-
blematic epithet, an omnibus adjective of opprobrium, that [could] designate a
person, place, attitude, condition, idea, situation, politics [or] behaviour
(145). In Rebatets writing, the word Jew is not merely a serviceable epithet
of scorn or abuse; it is the floating signifier of Otherness which formulates the
division between the same and different, inside and outside, French and
non-French (145). What is so fascinating is the fact that right-wing critics such
as Rebatet then went on to link the perceived ill-effects of Judeo-Germanism
with the filmic depictions of the realities of city life which began to proliferate
in the 1930s. These depictions included the work of indigenous filmmakers.
Rebatet detested both the emerging hard-boiled realism of Americans like
James M. Cain and the home-grown populist Parisian literature of Francis
Carco because they appeared to conflict with his political allegiances. Writing
in Les Tribus du cinma (1941), he linked the popularity of this literature to key
poetic realist films such as Marcel Carns Jenny (1936), and Le Jour se lve
(1939). For Rebatet, Carn was the most accomplished representative of that
Marxist aesthetic which (...) springs spontaneously from the political, financial
and spiritual rot that always follows the Jewification of a state (86). The lep-
rous and misty faubourgs which [Carn and his like] used for settings exuded
nothing but sordid feeling (87). Jewishness then becomes linked to the nega-
tive associations of the cultural representation of urban darkness. Right-wing
film historians Maurice Bardche and Robert Brasillachs made the same point
in their critical history of the cinema when they conflate morbidity with the na-
tional character of German cinema. In their view, The French cinema slowly
lost its national character in the later 1930s. The most famous works between
1936 and 1940 resorted to a morbid aesthetic analogous to that which held
sway in post-war Germany (in Vincendeau 1983, 6). Even in his memoirs
published in the 1960s, Brasillach was to complain about the way that the
migrs cried and raised their fists saying to France pay attention, whilst col-
laborating in doing their best to create the terror that they denounced (1968,
121). Despite this, one of the challenges of the early sound era for French
filmmaking was to manage an effective and nationally specific set of represen-
tational codes for the depiction of the national capital which could compete
with the successes of its main rivals, Germany and the United States. One of
the greatest paradoxes of the involvement of migr personnel in the French
industry of the 1930s was that they partly helped to shape a filmic version of
Paris which did compete, but they did so not just because they were able to fit
56 City of Darkness, City of Light
in, but also because of the contribution of the significantly different cultural
baggage that they brought with them.
From the perspective of the French film industry, the presence of foreign pro-
fessionals working alongside French workers on French-language produc-
tions was consistently viewed with a certain amount of ambiguity. By the early
years of 1933, it was evident that a number of directors who had achieved pop-
ular success with the French public with productions based in Berlin, were
viewing Paris as a destination due to increasing political difficulties in Ger-
many. Nino Frank touted this potential in a report which suggested that the
French capital could soon amass a group of talents which Hollywood would
be able to envy us for.74 One of the directors mentioned was Victor Trivas.
Trivass enthusiasm for working in Paris may well have been tempered by the
reports which began to regularly appear in the French film press. A typical edi-
torial in Pour Vous deplored the persecution of minorities in Nazi Germany
but, at the same time, it cogently emphasised the growing anxieties of native
French filmmakers. Several French directors have been coming to see us, it
reported. The current situation is worrying them. There is so little work in
France but [they say] you can see yourself calmly removed from directing a
The City in Context 59
film personnel. Gaston Thiery captured the thinly veiled tone of antagonism in
an article published in Paris-Midi. In a dig at the enthusiasms of the likes of Vic-
tor Trivas, he noted that We learn that a film with a truly French subject and
title is currently being shot in a Parisian studio (...) where the producer of this
film is one M. Apfelbaum (or some such name). (...) If we think about this care-
fully, will this really be a French film? (...) When one notes that half of the
French film workers are unemployed, the worry is whether the facilities of-
fered to foreigners arent perhaps a bit much (in Jeancolas 1983, 115). This
type of criticism was just the polite version of an increasingly harsh line of po-
litically motivated rhetoric which held sway over segments of parliamentary
discourse and, more widely, in the proliferating right-wing press. The pejora-
tive term mtque began to appear more frequently in articles along with the
word invasion. Jacques Feyder complained that Jewish invaders had taken
over the French cinema ( in Weber 1996, 93).78
A key example of this anxiety over national pride in the sphere of cultural
activity was the publication of Paul Morands France la doulce, first printed in
serial form in 1933 and then published by Gallimard in 1934. The novel sati-
rises the place of the foreigner in Frances film industry by telling the story of
the manipulation of a Breton aristocrat by a bunch of scheming foreign Jewish
financiers who want to set up a film production company. In the publicity at-
tached to the novel, Morand denied any intentions of ill will. To prevent any
misunderstandings, he wrote, I declare that the rabble who swarm around
here bear no relation to the big international names which we have welcomed
on their journey. I am only asking for a place for our compatriots; just a small
place in our national cinema. Nonetheless, the following description of the
supposed current state of French film production speaks volumes. This was a
new dimension, without any depth, where logic, form and normal relations
had disappeared in favour of a never-ending Tower of Babel in which words
and the simple ideas of ordinary human exchange were emptied of their origi-
nal sense. Only the word money was capable of stirring this heavy spirited
but powerful world (1934, 122). Morands theme of the corruption of French
cultural production was later reiterated in Marcel Pagnols self-reflexive cine-
matic representation of the film industry, Le Schpountz (1938). The film fea-
tured a Jewish producer and a director, Bogidor Glazounov, who because of
his undetermined nationality, Russian name and Italian accent was sarcasti-
cally allowed to be defined as a great French director (in Billard, 207).
As seen earlier, Frances Jewish population became a particular part of the
way that definitions of the French nation state were fought over by both sides
of the political spectrum in the 1930s. For the Right, the Jewish film migrs,
amongst others, represented an unwarranted threat to a pure and homogenous
version of nationhood, whilst for some Leftist elements they could stand as a
The City in Context 61
symbol of organised capitalism. Faulkner (1992) has even gone as far as argu-
ing that the Parti Communiste Franaiss (PCF) scornful but nationalistically
motivated rhetoric of the two hundred families during the period of the Pop-
ular Front actively contributed to the eventual success of the right-wing argu-
ment. The two hundred families were the unjustly favoured ruling elite of
the nation whose interests were naturally hostile to the programme of Lon
Blums short-lived Popular Front reform government which came to power af-
ter the elections of April-May 1936. Faulkners suggestion is that the PCF cre-
ated room for a competing interpretation by allowing the Right to supply its
own anti-patriotic equivalent of the Lefts two hundred families in naming
Jews and foreigners as enemies of the nation and the state (139-140). Be that as
it may, it is true that the reprieve offered by the Popular Front regarding
anti-foreigner legislation ended with the fall of Blums government in July
1937. Restrictions on immigrants and quotas on the number of foreigners em-
ployed in the film industry were re-enacted. In March 1938, illegal aliens were
even formally barred from Paris. They were given the choice of either leaving
the country or going to work on a farm in the provinces. In the year that the Sec-
ond World War broke out, Rebatets column in LAction franaise produced a
black list of Jews and foreigners who had directed films in France in 1938. Yet in
terms of many people mentioned in this book, Rebatet was in a way beating a
dead horse. Several of the migr filmmakers were already on their way to the
United States, a place whose film industry, unlike its French counterpart, was
from its earliest beginnings made up of migrants.
World War period at a time when Franco-German film relations were skewed
in favour of Paris. The main French companies had important subsidiaries in
Berlin and the majority of films exhibited in the German capital then were of
French origin.79 He started to have direct contact with Paris whilst working in
Berlin for Eclair, and before war was declared, he was put in charge of an Eclair
production unit in Vienna. Marcel Vandal, Pommers collaborator in the Aus-
trian capital, served as a co-producer with him on Fritz Langs migr Paris
film Liliom (1934). During the First World War, Frances subsidiaries in Berlin
were placed under military supervision, but the Franco-German film relation-
ship survived through the creation of innocuous sounding front companies
set up in neutral countries. In the immediate years after the First World War,
Pommer was at the forefront of the reorganisation of the nations film produc-
tion as Germanys film industry faced strengthened economic pressure from
Hollywood. Arguing that Germany needed to control capital because of the
pressure of war reparations, Pommer advocated the previously mentioned
system of import quotas for French film exports. He took on Fritz Lang as a
leading directorial talent and after his significant domestic and overseas suc-
cess with Robert Wienes Das Kabinett des Doctor Caligari (1920), he be-
came increasingly concerned with overseeing the high-production quality,
artistic end of German film production. Pommer became famous as the pro-
ducer of the so-called Grofilm such as Die Nibelungen (Fritz Lang, 1924) the
large-budget, export market driven features which are remembered today at
the expense of the vast majority of less-expensive, popular genre films, which
mainly targeted the domestic mass audience. By the mid-1920s, he had a pow-
erful holding in the eyes of his European competitors. Cinmatographie Fran-
aise called Pommer the soul of the gigantic [German] cinematographic or-
ganisation (in Hardt, 82).
Following the fallout from the controversial trade agreements between
U.F.A. and Paramount and M.G.M. in 1925, Pommer resigned from his posi-
tion in Germany and went to the United States for two years.80 It was there that
he encountered, first-hand, the material differences and advantages of a mod-
ern industrial infrastructure and consumer society that so interested the Berlin
intelligentsia of the time. When he came back to Europe, he brought with him
an enthusiasm for the possibilities of new production techniques. Pommer
had been fascinated with the superiority of American lighting techniques and
opened the door for Kodak and Eastman Panchromatic negative film to be
made available for German films. The subsequent degree of facility and exper-
tise in the possibilities of managing the exposure of light on negative film was
to be a significant contribution of the German migrs to French film produc-
tion. As well as introducing the novel concept of a shooting schedule, Pommer
also began exhibiting a greater degree of American showmanship which as
The City in Context 63
Hardt points out, became crucial to the German advantage in the transition to
sound. In 1929, Pommer declared that the task of his native film industry is
not so much the cultivation of the absolute artistic film, as it is the raising of the
artistic level of the entertainment film (in Hardt, 113). This comment provides
a clear indication of where he also stood in relation to his short-lived output in
France between 1933 and 1934.
Two key successes overseen by Erich Pommer in the early sound era reveal
the two directions that the export-led component of German cinema took in
the years leading up to Pommers decision to emigrate to Paris in 1933. Firstly,
there was the cycle of the light musical operettenfilm established by Germanys
first sound feature, Melodie des Herzens (Hanns Schwartz, 1929). As
Elsaesser points out, many of the migr directors obtained their first con-
tracts and assignments in France, Europe and Hollywood because of their
work in this genre (2000, 336). Secondly, there was the phenomenal success of
the darker dramatic elements of Der blaue Engel (Joseph von Sternberg,
1930). As already mentioned, many of these features were MLV productions
and Pommer became adept at allaying the costs of some productions by creat-
ing short-term partnerships with foreign business partners (See Appendix
Five). Given his demonstrable business flair, it is not surprising then, that
Pommer had already made provisions for his professional future by the time
the U.F.A. board met on 29 March 1933 to decide the fate of its Jewish employ-
ees. Unlike the majority of Pommers fellow Berlin migrs, the move to Paris
was for him, just his continuing of business as usual.
Ludwig Klitzsch had apparently assured Pommer in 1932, that U.F.A.
would not discriminate against Jews, but by the beginning of 1933 Pommer
had entered into discussions with American Fox Film Corporations Sidney
Kent about setting up a European production subsidiary in Germany or
France the following Autumn. Clearly, Pommer was hedging his bets about
the outcome of the political developments in his native country. After his dis-
missal from U.F.A., he remained in Berlin until the third week of April but
when his son began to encounter anti-Semitic discrimination at school,
Pommer immediately began making plans to take the Berlin-Paris train as far
as Hanover. The Pommer family was then driven into France at a more obscure
border crossing. Although Pommer rightly feared for his wife and child, there
is evidence that he was still cognizant of his status within the now highly po-
liticised world of German film production. He might well have been consider-
ing returning briefly, for he left preparatory work on the Fox German outlet
with an assistant, Eberhard Klagemann. Certainly, as with certain other promi-
nent German Jewish filmmakers, Nazi authorities were prepared to turn a
blind eye to the producers ethnicity for the time being. During his stay in
Paris, probably for propaganda as much as practical reasons, German authori-
64 City of Darkness, City of Light
the Depression and xenophobic sentiments were running high. Pommers sta-
tus as a particularly international migr was beginning to count against him.
In relation to Liliom, Lucien Rebatet was to note in a sneering fashion that by
virtue of the cleaning of the German studios, the Jew Erich Pommer has in-
stalled himself with us. (...) M. Pommer may wish to make France the new cen-
tre of cosmopolitan film production, but he has only brought us a yid film in
both technique and spirit.86 Pommer was also suffering from health problems
and decided to take move to the United States. He was to return to Germany
only after the war, where he took a job initially turned down by fellow migr
Billy Wilder; that of overseeing the reconstruction of the shattered Berlin film
industry during the American Occupation.
In terms of the scale of his work, Robert Siodmak is probably the most impor-
tant of the German migr filmmakers who came to Paris in the 1930s. Apart
from the scale of his output whilst in France, Siodmak is also noteworthy be-
cause of the number of other migrs with whom he worked. Like Erich
Pommer, he was a well connected and well respected member of the former
Berlin filmmaking fraternity. Accounts of his personal history have played up
the apparently shifting nature of his identity. Like his compatriot Fritz Lang,
Siodmak was not averse to an element of self-mythologising. Contrary to per-
sonal legend, the director was actually born in Germany and not the United
States to where his father had emigrated at the end of the previous century.
Siodmak liked to refer to the accident of his so-called American ancestry espe-
cially after emigrating to America himself, but he was of firm European origins
as a descendent of a group of Hasidic Jews in Poland. He worked as an actor in
the theatre and briefly set up an illustrated revue magazine before moving to
Berlin with his brother Curt in the mid-1920s with the aim of getting a foothold
in the capitals film industry. Central to Siodmaks place in this book is his as-
sociation from an early stage with the cinematic representation of the modern
city. In 1929, along with fellow caf-life associates Billy Wilder, Edgar George
Ulmer, Friedrich Zimmerman and Eugen Schfftan, he was responsible for the
influential plein-air city documentary Menschen am Sonntag which depicted
the activities of the residents of Berlin during the course of their day of rest. All
of these filmmakers were to emigrate from Germany in the 1930s with Wilder
and Schfftan both working in Paris. Wilder stayed just long enough to make
Mauvaise graine (1934) whilst Schfftan continued to be part of the French
66 City of Darkness, City of Light
ema that is clean and decent so that we may be spared from now on these un-
healthy erotic disturbances (in Dumont, 85). Not long after Goebbels Hotel
Kaiserhof speech on 28 March and the formal call for a boycott of all Jewish
businesses on 1 April, Siodmak made the understandable decision to leave for
France with his wife-to-be, Bertha Odenheimer. Perhaps on the basis of his fa-
thers American citizenship he managed to enter the country on a simple visa
without any problem, but for the duration of his stay until 1939, he was never
formally granted a residency permit by the French authorities.
Siodmaks two main biographers to date have focussed primarily on the
significance of his American films, especially those which make a contribution
to the post-war noir cycle. Disappointingly, Deborah Lazaroff-Alpi simply
transcribes her predecessors brief chapter on the directors French career
meaning that a need remains for a more detailed consideration of Siodmaks
Parisian output. Before analysing and contextualising the directors French
films specifically set in the French capital, a broader survey of his place within
French film production of the 1930s is necessary. By May 1933, Siodmak was
being interviewed in the Parisian press about his future projects in the French
film industry. At this stage in his career, it appears that Siodmak truly believed
that his chances of obtaining American residency had expired and so the fa-
mous director of Tumultes was described as for the moment without na-
tionality. I dont know how long I am going to be here. For a long time I
think, he told Jean Barois in Paris-Midi.88 None of Siodmaks early projects
amounted to anything, but they reveal a previously unrecognised consistency
in that they suggest a sustained desire to fit in with the codes of French culture.
They included screen adaptations of Julien Greens Leviathan, Maupassants
Bel-Ami (with Charles Boyer) and perhaps most interestingly, a version of
Edouard Bourdets lesbian drama La Prisonnire. Siodmak also turned down
the screen adaptation of Flauberts Madame Bovary on the basis that he didnt
know the French provinces well enough.89 The project went to Jean Renoir
instead. Finally, in July 1933, Siodmak was offered a contract with Seymour
Nebenzahls Nero-Film and his first film in France, an adaptation of another
Bourdet play, Le Sexe faible, went into production. It starred many of the origi-
nal stage cast including Pierre Brasseur and Victor Boucher. The script was
written by Yves Mirande, the dialogue supervisor on Tumultes. Mirandes
work was partly amended by fellow migr Hermann Kosterlitz.
A highly revealing interview with Lucien Rebatet at the time, provides a
fascinating glimpse into life on the set of an migr production.90 It also sug-
gests ample evidence of the simmering xenophobic resentment of the right-
wing press. Siodmak is evidently anxious to demonstrate his credentials as an
unthreatening European rather than a specifically German filmmaker. He
doesnt want to appear like some problem-making political figure, but Rebatet
The City in Context 69
Buster Keaton vehicle Le Roi des Champs-lyses (Max Nosseck, 1935) in the
Winter of 1934. La Vie Parisienne (1936) was a lavishly funded production.
As an indication of its anticipated box-office returns, dozens of sets were con-
structed at the Path-Nathan studios and there was an expensive publicity
campaign. In spite of these efforts, the film was not a commercial success. This
might well have been due to Siodmaks attempt to alter the scenario of the
original which was set in the heyday of the French Second Empire. The ironic,
temporally layered nature of the narrative combined with the relative lack of
original music from the stage production may well have led to the French pub-
lics disenchantment.
Next Siodmak worked on another music-related project with Mtropa-
Films entitled Le Grand Refrain (1936). It was written by Yves Mirande and
scored by the celebrated German composer Richard Werner Heymann. Since
Heymann had written the music for two of the previous models for La Vie Pa-
risienne the German FLV operettas Der Kongre Tanzt/Le Congrs
samuse (1931) and Die Drei von der Tankstelle/Le Chemin du paradis
(1930) this could have been an effort to meet audience expectations more di-
rectly. Siodmaks subsequent film, Mister Flow (1936), was shot in the sum-
mer of 1936 in curious circumstances. The project, previously turned down by
Pierre Chenal, was based on the crime novel by Gaston Leroux and featured a
number of Pariss most prominent stage talents such as Louis Jouvet and
Edwige Feuillre. It was written by the prominent screenwriter Henri Jeanson
and financed by Nicholas Vondas, an impecunious Greek producer, and so the
production was marred by the fact that many of the actors were only paid on a
daily basis. Often only one of the major actors was on the set at a time necessi-
tating some awkward camera manoeuvres. Siodmak was obliged to use his
own furniture for the decor. Despite these setbacks, the film was a critical and
financial success and it appeared, from then on, Siodmaks currency within the
French film industry was secure. His next project, the white slave trade drama,
Le Chemin de Rio (1937), was also written by Henri Jeanson and starred Jean-
Pierre Aumont, Suzy Prim and Jules Berry, but it was his last with Nero-Film.
Siodmaks cousin had apparently taken advantage of his precarious position
and consistently refused to pay the director properly for his efforts. The two
never spoke again.
Mollenard (1938) saw Siodmak reunited with Eugen Schfftan on a pres-
tigious adaptation by Charles Spaak of the Prix de Paris-winning adventure
novel. It starred Harry Baur, Albert Prjean, Pierre Renoir and Gina Mans and
was made for producer Edouard Corniglion-Molinier. Like Le Chemin de Rio,
the film had an ostentatiously international setting for its dramatic narrative.
Again, it combined the work of a prominent French script-writer who paid
particular attention to atmospheric visual details in both lighting effects and
The City in Context 71
set design. In this case, Mollenard boasted the contribution of the Hungarian
set designer Alexandre Trauner who, like Schfftan and Courant, also eventu-
ally worked with leading French directors Jean Renoir and Marcel Carn to-
wards the end of the decade.
We can now see what happened to the German migrs who stayed in
France to weather the original storms of racial disdain and economic difficul-
ties during the period of 1933-4. Many were clearly beginning to integrate
themselves by becoming major forces in French film production. It is notice-
able, for example, how many of the reviews of Mollenard refer to its distinc-
tively French character. Le Petit Parisien wrote that the film honours French
production whilst Pierre Gignac claimed that Siodmaks film marked a
red-letter day in the progressive output of the French film industry (in
Dumont, 118).
Mollenard was not a box-office success, but perhaps the level of critical
acclaim that Siodmak now enjoyed persuaded him to embark on his most
directly political French film. In the early Summer of 1938, he was engaged in
negotiations with the Austro-Hungarian migr novelist and playwright
dn von Horvth to shoot a version of his novel Jugend ohne Gott about the
conflict between a German school teacher and a class of Hitler Youth. In a truly
bizarre turn of fate, the writer was suddenly killed when a tree fell on him in
front of the cinema showing Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (1937)
where he was due to meet Siodmaks wife. After completing the unfinished
portions of two features, Ultimatum (Robert Wiene, 1938) and Les Frres
corses (Jean Tarride, 1939), Siodmak turned to his final French film, Piges,
made between April and May 1939 against the backdrop of a seemingly inevi-
table war with Germany. Piges was to be the directors most successful film
in France, although it did attract criticism from some quarters keen, once
again, on emphasising Siodmaks ethnicity. LAction Franaise complained
about how national treasure, Maurice Chevalier, was used by the director and
the co-scriptwriter. Two foreigners, Messers Siodmak and Companeez, have
played this dirty trick on him, it wrote (in Dumont, 123). The film obviously
benefitted from the star performance of Maurice Chevalier, but it also saw a re-
turn to the conflation of careful social detail, atmospheric visual style, and an
interest in the undercurrents of urban criminal psychologies which marked
Siodmaks earlier Berlin successes. By now, Siodmak, one of the longest estab-
lished of Germanys French-based Jewish migrs, was making plans to leave
his country of asylum. Upon discovering that he was in fact still eligible for
American citizenship, he organised his departure to the United States, sailing
from France on the very day before war broke out. He had an advance for a
Dutch-based film to be made the following year in his pocket, but like so many
72 City of Darkness, City of Light
other migrs from Berlin, he never returned. Instead, the world of the Ameri-
can city now became his subject.
3 City of Light
Paris as Spectacle
The Avenue de lOpra inundated with electric light; rue Quatre Septembre shin-
ing with a thousand gas jets (...) a crowd coming and going under a shower of rosy
and whitest light diffused from great ground-glass globes (...) that mass of gleam-
ing streets which lead to the Thatre Franais, to the Tuileries, to the Concorde and
Champs-Elyses, each one of which brings you a voice of the great Paris festival,
calling and attracting you on seven sides, like the stately entrances of seven en-
chanted palaces, kindling in your brain and veins the madness of pleasure
(E. de Amicis in Clark 1996, 76).
was at the time of the proliferation of guidebooks for the traveller to Paris and,
just as importantly, the emergence of the picture postcard as a means of send-
ing Paris as it was pictured to the provinces and overseas. The popularity of
the spectacular view of the city was developed along side the running series of
Expositions Universelles, one of which, in 1867, coincided with the first produc-
tion of Offenbachs operetta La Vie Parisienne.3 At such exhibitions the world
came to Paris twice: first, in the physical sense of paying visitors, and secondly,
in the metaphorical sense in the form of such erected displays as the Rue des
Nations (1878) with its faade of various architectural styles from around the
globe. Paris was then mailed back to the rest of the world in the form of picto-
rial messages; most spectacularly at the 1889 exposition when enthusiastic vis-
itors could post images of Paris from the top of that recently erected emblem of
urban modernity, the Eiffel Tower.4
Both the original production of La Vie Parisienne and Siodmaks loose ad-
aptation explicitly refer to this idea of Paris defining itself both against the
world as something distinctive and unique and within the world as the centre
for a kind of communal cosmopolitanism. It is surely not coincidental that
both the theatrical and film production are the work of German migr outsid-
ers who found themselves producing work inside the capital about the capi-
tal.5 In his book on Offenbach and Paris, Kracauer (1937) specifically argues
that the world of the Parisian boulevards suited the composers social status as
a rootless foreigner. They were both related in their nature, he suggests.
The boulevards were no home in the ordinary sense. Their striking charac-
teristic was their lack of anchorages (75). He also goes on to suggest that the
operetta was, in fact, in some ways an migr product (141). These com-
ments beg the intriguing question of whether Siodmak actually ever read
Kracauers work. It was published in German the year that the film was made,
and there are certain striking descriptions throughout the text, which recall
scenes from the film.
The plot of the Offenbach operetta concerns the entertaining amorous and
mercenary entanglements of a visiting wealthy Brazilian baron, his wife and
mistress, and two scheming Parisian fortune-hunters. A key chorus by Meilhac
and Halvy (1889, 20), also reproduced in the 1935 film, gives an idea of how
Paris was represented in the operetta:
Nous venons,
Arrivons,
De tous les pays du monde,
Par la terre ou bien par londe,
Italiens, Brsiliens, Japonais, Hollandais, Espagnols, Romagnols, gyptians,
Pruviens,
Nous venons,
76 City of Darkness, City of Light
Arrivons!
De tous les pays du monde,
Par la terre ou bien par londe,
Nous venons,
Arrivons,
La vapeur nous amne,
Nous allons envahir,
La cit souveraine,
Le sjour du plaisir,
On accourt,
On sempresse,
Pour connatre O Paris,
Pour connatre livresse,
De tes jours, de tes nuits,
Tous les trangers ravis,
Vers toi slancent Paris!
Nous allons chanter,
Nous allons crier,
Nous allons souper,
Nous allons aimer,
Oh! Mon Dieu, nous allons tous,
6
Nous amuser comme des fous.
Siodmaks film version retains the cosmopolitan narrative hinge of the visiting
wealthy colonial to the capital of pleasure, but enlarges the range of entangle-
ments by having Don Ramiro (Max Dearly) leave his mistress and Paris in 1900
and return in 1936 with his granddaughter Helenita (Conchita Montenegro).
In 1936, the exuberant Brazilian is still up to his amorous indulgences and ex-
cessively energetic visits to entertainment venues. There are several key scenes
set in hotel rooms and train stations to create the sense that Paris belongs not
only to its residents, but to the entire world. These moments clearly underline
the element of journey in the films narrative, but they also remind one of
Hamid Naficys observation, made in another context, that exilic cinema in
general often represents a range of transitional places and spaces (2001, 5).
Train stations, hotel lobbies, the interiors of cars and the motif of the suitcase
can all be used, as they are in La Vie Parisienne, to signify a sense of instabil-
ity and displacement. To emphasise this point, at significant intersections in
the plot of Siodmaks film, a postcard-like image is visualised in order to rein-
force the idea of the dazzling spectacle of the city for the visitor. After a scene
set in a drab, functional immigration office in 1936, for instance, an official
moves to a open a windows left shutter and declares: This is Paris! The right
City of Light 77
shutter opens of its own accord and the image dissolves into a panoramic night
skyline shot of the city with the illuminated Eiffel Tower on the horizon and
the rooftop of apartments in the foreground. To reinforce the picture element
of the city, the camera tracks back slowly to frame the image with the inclusion
of the bordering element of the window. Prior to that the film opened with a
tableau shot of the theatre La Vie Parisienne at night, again with the Eiffel
Tower in the background and this time the twinkling features of the City of
Light breaking up the darkness. The effect is of an instantly recognisable, al-
most iconic, display of Parisianisme. It could also be the cover of a guide-
book from the period.
Wilders Mauvaise graine is also interested in the notion of the city on dis-
play. It frequently uses postcard-like images of urban spaces such as the Pont
Alexandre III or the Bois de Boulogne and has a developed sense of the city as
an open-air site of play and leisure. Scenes such as the car chase at the begin-
ning of the film, when Pasquier (Pierre Mingand) decides to steal a parked ve-
hicle from under the eyes of a gang of car thieves, are perfect examples of how
the film turns Paris into spectacle by integrating a sense of the space and free-
dom of the city with the modern sensations of speed and mobility. In his deft
commentary on the development of new forms of perception in Paris under
Haussmannisation, Wolfgang Schivelbusch (1986, 189) has argued that the de-
partment store and railway journey developed a panoramic mode of view-
ing so that the object was no longer experienced intensively, discretely (...)
but evanescently, impressionistically. This effect is managed in the film by a
range of fluid points of view. For example, as the chase begins, the camera is
placed on the bonnet of the crooks car looking in front at the speeding vehicle.
We then rapidly cut across space, but in the same time continuum, to a view
from the rear seat of Pasquiers car. We see him from behind but we also see
his face in the rearview mirror as the city speeds by in a blur. This tightness of
vision is later contrasted with alternate panoramic views which include a
spectacular extreme high wide-angle shot of the two vehicles maneuvering
across the space of an open square and of the moving car in relation to the mo-
bility of the frame. This gauging of space and motion allows Wilder to inte-
grate more fully the exhilaration of the chase with the freedom of seeing rap-
idly changing vistas of the city flashing by. Most spectacular of all is the
scene when the camera is planted on the bonnet of the lead vehicle to assure a
visceral sense of new forward-driven space constantly emerging into the
frame to reveal the sights of a city in transit. Towards the end of Mauvaise
graine another chase scene involves the Parisian police following their
quarry, Jean la cravatte (Raymond Galle), by means of that iconic pictorial rep-
resentation of the city, the map of the Metro system. Previous to that we wit-
nessed Pasquier and his girlfriend Jeannettes (Danielle Darrieux) escaping
78 City of Darkness, City of Light
from the city; their route actually mapped out on the screen with a camera
moving across the map of France, mimicking the couples real geographical
relationship to the capital.
La Crise est finie, Siodmaks first migr musical, also opens with some
non-Parisians a provincial troupe of down-on-their-heels theatrical perform-
ers taking a trip to Paris. It also entails a conflation of movement and a certain
commodified or standardised imagining of the city.7 After the umpteenth lack-
lustre performance of their stage number On ne voit a qu Paris (You
Only See That in Paris), and their being fired by their manager, the group ac-
tually decides to seek their fortunes in the capital. It is clear that for the youn-
ger troupe members Paris exists only as a representation. Do you know
Paris? one asks. Only as a view in a painting another replies. Im afraid of
Paris, one girl exclaims. The troupe shouts their denial and the girls wail con-
tinues as the camera swish pans from the backstage area of a provincial theatre
to a painted backdrop of trees. This scenery begins to rotate as a train whistle
blows. We also hear the sound of the train engine picking up and the beginning
of the refrain from the previous number. As the pace of the music increases in
time with the rhythm of the train, the artificial scenery dissolves into a blurred
vision of speed shot from a real train car window . The second, far more exu-
berant, version of On ne voit a qu Paris which now follows, underlines
the pleasures, delights (and dangers) of the capital that the troupe will proba-
bly encounter. The ideas that the lyrics refer to are visualised on screen by
means of a witty montage of short dramatic inserts. As we see the scenery
passing by, Madame Olga (Suzanne Dehelly)s voice sings Aucune ville nest
aussi romantique que Paris / Montmartre et Montparnasse sont des paradis.8
Siodmak cuts to a shot in which the camera moves from the window pane of
the carriage to rest on four seated figures: a male, Olga, Marcel (Albert Prjean)
and Nicole (Danielle Darrieux). They are pictured in a state of communal
imagining and anticipation. Olga, with the voice of maturity and experience,
continues in full swing:
Les jeunes y vivent damour et deau frache et lon se dit
9
On se voit a qu Paris.
With the very youthful Nicole listening and smiling, Marcel continues spin-
ning the myth:
Tous les jours 100,000 taxis circulent et font du bruit
Le soir 100,000 lumires font oublier la nuit
Et 100,000 jolies filles font des rves jolis
10
On ne voit a qu Paris
City of Light 79
He continues:
Les apaches sont polis, leurs gestes sont prcis
Aprs avoir tout pris, ils vous disent merci
Aucune ville nest aussi romantique que Paris
Montmartre et Montparnasse sont des paradis
On se dit en voyant tous ces chants et ces cris
11
On se voit a qu Paris
The succession of studio-bound images relating to the words of the song are
very obviously artificial and thus create the impression of distance from the
real city.
In La Crise est finie, and particularly in La Vie Parisienne, we notice a
blurring between staged or imagined Paris and real Paris, perceived in
terms of communal experience. The theatrical version of the city that La Vie
Parisienne promises in the opening tableau is correlated with the space of the
city itself as if to suggest that they constitute one seamless whole.12 The se-
quence thus evokes the sense of Paris as a communal home a place of belong-
ing by developing the way the theatre world and the urban world intersect.
The cinema spectator is taken on a journey from Parisian life to La Vie Pa-
risienne by the figure of a visiting male customer who descends from his car-
riage accompanied by a slow, romantic musical score. The camera lingers, in a
medium close-up shot, on the steps outside with the doorman standing to the
left and a poster announcing La Vie Parisienne With Lianne dIsigny to the
right. The visitor passes the ticket desk and the music begins to surge with an-
ticipation as he climbs the stairs. The moment he exits the frame, the film cuts
to a high-angle shot of the conclusion of a raucous revue number. Audience
members are visible in the lower part of the frame but the energy and near cha-
otic spectacle of the gyrating bodies of the formally dressed performers domi-
nates the image. This density of feeling is at odds with the quietude of the pre-
ceding sequence so that the impression is one of concentrated emotionality.
The emotionality of this performance works as a bond for the diegetic audi-
ence members, one of whom, in a subsequent shot, blows a kiss to the perform-
ers. The cast raise their hands in unison, almost as if to return the affection, as
the music reaches its climax. This contract with the audience and the perform-
ers is re-enacted when we cut from a backstage aerial shot of the cast preparing
to bow in front of the audience to a full-frontal, proscenium shot of the curtains
opening on a crowded stage from the audiences point of view. The sense of
shared Paris created by the emotionality of the bond between audience and
performers is also suggested in the final part of the introduction which takes
place at the railway station. There is a long, steady tracking shot which details
the many departing couples on the platform. But instead of following the di-
80 City of Darkness, City of Light
rection of the train, the camera moves in reverse towards the city which is be-
ing left behind. This helps us to make sense of the use of the earlier chorus as
musical accompaniment. The lightly ironic use of operetta music and accom-
panying visual style evoke a powerful sense of departure which is developed
in the subsequent point of view shot of the passengers gazing onto the plat-
form and the faces of those who form the home they are leaving behind. The
emphasis, again, is on the communality of the experience. When the film shifts
to the present, we see the return to Paris of Don Ramiro after a long absence.
His arrival at the airport is preceded in the film by another musical sequence,
which is set in period costume at a railway station. This time, although the mu-
sical chorus is the same, the scene is not real Paris but the stage. The two
have become blurred once more.
In La Crise est finie we never see the railway station and point of arrival,
but the transition from Paris as it is performed to Paris as it really is is ef-
fected during the progression of the number when we see the troupe arrive
and actually continue the song in the street. In the real Paris we see a succes-
sion of disappointments for the performers who have to face rejection because
theatre managers only seem to be interested in young women for their nude
revues. It is possible to read this passage from dream to brutal fact as a symp-
tomatic commentary on the position of the migrs in Paris. The production of
La Crise est finie was, as we have already seen, accompanied by an orches-
trated press campaign by French film professionals against the film. However,
one can also read the progression of the song in terms of one of the broader
crises that the film makes explicit reference to. Siodmaks obtrusive mise-en-
scne during the number indicates that the capital can be linked in this version
of the song not just to live theatrical performance but to the specificity of the re-
corded moving image. The fact that the capital is pictured through a fusion of
song and insistent cinematic devices such as the variety of wipes between
shots is an ironic foregrounding of the fact that the troupe will eventually
make their Parisian home in a disused theatre that is fatefully for them
eventually converted into a cinema. In this way the idea of an emotionally
shared version of mythical Paris sustained by the bond between the perfor-
mance of the singers and the audience differs from that in La Vie Parisienne.
As the song progresses, and the diegetic audience leaves the train to enter
real Paris, the potency of the theatricalised version of the myth of the city is
in fact undermined by a rival mode of entertainment: the cinema.
City of Light 81
ment in the French film industry. Does this suggestion undermine an attempt
to read the films as smooth adaptations to convention? To answer this ques-
tion, and in order to examine the work of La Vie Parisienne and La Crise est
finie in relation to Parisian representation in more detail, I will now define
more clearly what the components of this light tradition of Parisian represen-
tation were. In so doing, I will also examine what sorts of myths were actually
proposed in these various configurations.
If I have argued that Paris was foregrounded in the light tradition in terms
of a sustained bond between live performance and audience, it is largely be-
cause notions of what constituted the city were, historically speaking, intri-
cately bound up with performance and consumption in the sphere of entertain-
ment. It is not surprising, therefore, that acts of display and acts of viewing and
communal imagining also feature in many French urban cinematic representa-
tions of the 1930s.13 As I have already indicated, it is possible to equate this
showing and imagining of the city partly with the historical emergence of prac-
tices associated with the spectacle of The City of Light. The very lighting up
of the city and spaces of performance by means of the use of electricity as a re-
placement for the standard gas lamp; the development of a culture of civic pro-
motion and the actual lightening of urban space by the removal of dense net-
works of medieval street complexes all relate to the concurrent emergence of a
commodified and bourgeois culture of diversion and entertainment. Clark ar-
gues the same point by stating that the rise of commercialized entertainments
in Paris, catering to a mass public (...) cannot be understood apart from (...) the
end of old patterns of neighbourhood and the birth of a city organized round
separate unities of work, residence, and distraction (1996, 235). This process
undoubtedly helped to propagate a master narrative of an association between
Paris, performance and pleasure which spread far outside the capital, hence the
journeying I have been referring to.14 It also, symbolically, allowed for the en-
hancement of the equation between capital and nation Paris was France.
By the 1930s and the time of the arrival of the migrs in Paris, live city en-
tertainment had evolved to the extent that the working class or petit bourgeois
tradition of the localised neighbourhood caf-concert which combined the
socialising aspect of the caf with the consumer aspect of spectatorship had
15
waned considerably (Vincendeau 1985, 153). It had not totally disappeared,
but the more formalised revue grand spectacle or the spectacle de varits, which
had begun to emerge in hand with the new viewing practices of the city on dis-
play in the late-19th century, had risen to considerable prominence. These
newer types of consolidated performance offered the pleasure, as their names
suggest, of spectacle be it of the order of elaborate, and thus costly, staged mu-
sic and song numbers, or a succession of variety acts consisting of wondrous
feats by acrobats, magicians, and the like. Many of the embedded notions
City of Light 83
about the popular image of light Paris derived from a sustained relationship
between performers and public which had failed to dissipate despite the shift
from an intimate milieu to one of stage-bound spectacle. Indeed, it was partly
because of this very heavy commercialisation of light entertainment that a
mythical version of the city emerged. The idea of an image of the city being en-
acted in direct and quite small-scale terms by a contract between the performer
and live neighbourhood audience via song lyrics, for example was slowly
replaced by the emergence of a different entertainment complex. At the heart
of this complex, which amplified the same work of staging an image of the city,
was an urban-centred star system which propagated the closeness of the per-
former to the public in terms beyond that of the usual intimacy fostered by
watching live performance. We can thus see the emergence of an extended
Parisian community being fostered in the proliferation of sheet music, illus-
trated journals, posters and front-of-house publicity material. This dates back
broadly to such entertainment figures as Thrsa of whom, for example, it was
written at the time: she is a woman of the people (...) she represents life as it is
in the city (Jules Valls in Jando 1979, 20).
By the time the migrs arrived in Paris, this correspondence between print
media, performer and public had been strengthened by new forms of
city-oriented communication practices. Boulevard theatre, music hall and cab-
aret now had to share the stage with the mass media of cinema and gramo-
phone recordings to the extent that the relationship between cinema and
other entertainment forms [can] be seen in a multi-dimensional way rather
than as a one-dimensional, linear, connection of influence or of one forms de-
cline signalling the rise of another one (Vincendeau 1985, 115). This multi-
dimensionality, which also intersects with radio, was still bound up with the
relationship between Paris and performance. This is not the same as saying
that because so much of the entertainment industry was based in a relatively
concentrated area of Paris things inevitably had a Parisian identity, though this
was to a great extent true.16 Rather, the city was performed in the sense of a, by
now, historically calibrated collusion between public and performers. For ex-
ample, through a combination of lyrics, staging and sheer charisma, the body
of many music hall, cabaret or theatrical entertainers (many of whom moved
in and out of film production) were now linked with the body of the city. In the
case of stars like Maurice Chevalier, the performer began to personify Paris to
the outside world. Large stars like Josephine Baker and Mistinguett who had
performed in venues like the Folies Bergre (named after a Parisian 18th-cen-
tury house of pleasure) or the appositely named Casino de Paris were inti-
mately associated with the city in the popular imagination through song
(Mistinguetts a! Cest Paris! for example), titles of revues and the commen-
tary of both critics and fans. Performers like Albert Prjean had adopted defin-
84 City of Darkness, City of Light
caf-concert, Clark also wishes to demonstrate that the popular culture on offer
here was generally produced for an unstable and newly emergent urban pe-
tit-bourgeoisie. Similarly Vincendeau has argued that, by the 1930s, the incor-
poration of the inheritance of these class-based mythologies which stem
from traditions of live performance meant in cinematic terms an emphasis on
nostalgia. According to Andrew (1995, 121), this emphasis on a lost commu-
nity can be read in terms of Frances economic and international situation.
As its increasingly urban population became more alienated, the cinema con-
veyed the security of a former identity. The point, however, is that this for-
mer identity was very likely never secure in the first place it always carried
elements of myth. One can also go further to say that the element of dropping
in on a world made manifest in Clairs films about the faubourg by the gentle
swooping in camera takes he frequently uses as establishing shots is actually
consistent with a certain type of class voyeurism which goes back to the
inter-texts of 19th-century realist novelists like Emile Zola and Eugne Sue,
painters like Gustave Courbet and the entire Parisian documentary photo-
graphic project of Charles Marville. This would suggest a paradoxical specta-
torial positioning instead of one that assimilated the myth wholesale. This
point may very well be underlined by the fact that directors such as Clair and
Siodmak themselves came from middle-class backgrounds.
This class-based opposition, which occurs throughout the French cinema of
this period, is successfully transplanted into the narrative of La Crise est
finie; particularly when the spontaneity and warmth of the theatrical ensem-
ble is threatened by the efforts of the comically repressed piano-shop owner,
M. Bernouillin (Marcel Carpentier). The audience back then would have al-
ready been cued by the coded signals provided by the Parisian performance
histories of the main stars. In his revue performances, Prjean was famous for
his working-class Parisian cloth cap whilst Carpentiers dress and perfor-
mance style connoted a bourgeois type familiar from the boulevard stage. Su-
zanne Dehelly who plays Olga, the old stagehand, had a particular reputation
for playing witty mature women in boulevard comedy. According to Prjeans
autobiography, Ren Clair, who had used him to great acclaim in Sous les
toits de Paris, said they like you because youre just like them (1956, 105).
What is interesting in the scene where the troupe receives Bernouillins letter,
informing them that he plans to convert their theatre into a cinema, is how well
Siodmaks mise-en-scne conspires to picture a performance-based urban com-
munity in opposition to its antithesis. The troupe are clearly visualised in a
fluid integrated manner. In a medium close-up, we see Marcel seated at a pi-
ano on-stage with Nicole to his left and Olga to his right. Exasperated, Marcel
rises and exits screen right. The camera follows him to the point when we can
see Olgas reaction more fully. She then turns and moves in the same direction.
86 City of Darkness, City of Light
Siodmak cuts to a shot of the stage some distance ahead and the camera starts
to track right in the direction of Olga as she walks across the space behind
some of the cast members. The camera halts as Ren and the concierge enter
the screen talking in the foreground. They move off and we start to follow
them in the same unbroken shot. A group of girls passes in front of the couple
and the camera begins to track them. As they begin to exit the stage, Marcel
re-emerges screen left picking up the path they have set out on. Through this
careful integration of space and movement we have a sense of how the com-
munity is linked geographically and emotionally to the environment which
matters most to them: the stage. It is the actual stage that ensnares Bernouillin
when the community decides to take action. Marcel hatches a plan to lure the
shopkeeper to the theatre and then pull the stage trapdoor open. When
Bernouillin enters with the concierge he is captured in a long-shot from way
back in the aisles as if the theatre itself is watching him. The space is lit by the
migr cinematographer Eugen Schfftan to suggest the darkened and shad-
owy sense of menace, which became something of a trademark of his. When
Siodmak moves the camera to inter-cut between closer shots of Bernouillin
and Marcel, who is hiding in the wings, we have an even stronger sense of
class difference. This is managed by an effective blurring of the French and
German inheritances. Marcel is shot from straight on to implicate him more
persuasively with the spectator. The contours of his white tee shirt itself a
class signifier are brightly illuminated against a background shadow. He
whistles the refrain from On ne voit a qu Paris as if to suggest the sense of
musical Paris colluding with him in the downfall of that which threatens it.
Bernouillin, by contrast, is shot from a prominent high camera angle to
emphasise his isolation and malevolent intent. Schfftan uses a minimum of
identifiable light. The contours of the shopkeepers body as he moves amongst
the pools of diffuse shadow are pitch black.
There is another French urban class location that has always existed with its
own set of mythologies. As Rifkin implies when he claims that Paris can as
well be typified through the society lady as the midinette (1995, 108), an imagi-
nary map of the city, composed according to co-ordinates of entertainment,
must take into account more than the spaces accorded to the working-class
community. It should also be read in terms of gender and sexuality.19 Again,
this version of the city works against the standards of bourgeois propriety. The
mythical Paris that relates to an idea of the complex of sexuality, permissive-
ness and luxury moved in spatial terms from salon to theatre and opera to cab-
aret and night club. These representations, very often coded as feminine, in
part stemmed from the 19th-century comic farce traditions of Feydeau and
Labiche and the verbal wit and disruptive gender comedy of Beaumarchais in
the 18th century. They were sustained by the growth of urban performance
City of Light 87
spaces in the 19th century as well as the steady commodification of the female
body in relation to the material culture available in the streets of Hausmanns
Paris. Through advertising and shop window displays in the citys new spaces
an association between France, femininity, luxury and sexuality was consoli-
dated and indelibly promoted. Entertainment forms such as the comic opera
and the increasingly licentious spectacle of the Belle poque cabaret and the
world of gai Paris embodied this tradition as well as opening it to certain
cross-class movements on the part of the demi-mondaine. The literary character
of Zolas Nana,20 for example, embodies the figure of the courtisane, the kept
woman of wealthy married aristocrats and bourgeois bachelor society figures
who were flourishing at the time of Offenbachs original production. Such fig-
ures raise the issue of what Prendergast (1995, 138) calls an increasingly
opaque and fluid urban reality, in keeping track of the identities and move-
ments of the unregistered prostitute. He sees the obsessive abundance of doc-
umentation both visual and literary regarding prostitution in the nine-
teenth century as evidence of an anxiety about the place of the prostitute as a
metaphor for Paris. Despite the strict and hypocritical prostitution and censor-
ship laws of the period, the woman in particular the transgressing, adul-
terous woman [was] always the site of social and sexual trouble, a trouble of
classification, a problem of identity (137).
We can see this blurring occurring in La Vie Parisienne, for instance,
through the figure of Lianne (Marcelle Praince) who is linked to both versions
of Paris: the city of society and bourgeois spectacle and the city of the petit
peuple. As the star of the La Vie Parisienne revue and the mistress of Don
Ramiro, Lianne personifies the principal set of mythical elements that the first
version of light Paris offered. In the films prologue, set in 1900, the world of
Paris created by the emotionality of the bond between audience and perform-
ers spills over into the subsequent dressing room party. This world is sus-
tained by a good humoured and vigorous depiction of conviviality, luxury, ro-
mance and an extravagant celebration of the good life amongst the cast and
theatergoers. Lianne is a figurehead of this Paris. She represents conviviality
because her sociable presence generates affection and attention. This convivi-
ality extends to a form of cosmopolitanism by means of the inclusion of the
Brazilian lover. Paris can accommodate the world. Lianne also embodies a cer-
tain blending of sexuality and romance which is a continuation of the perfor-
mance on stage. There is a sense of licentiousness and permissiveness which is
related to the way she displays her body; her undergarments slip down for all
to see, for example. Later, when she is reunited with Don Ramiro, their rela-
tionship is far more flirtatious and physical than the sober coupling of Don
Ramiros granddaughter and Jacques (Georges Rigaud). Luxury and the good
life are indicated by the spirited consumption of champagne; itself almost a
88 City of Darkness, City of Light
suitcase with the revealing photo of him which has appeared all over the city
to announce his heartlessness. He cant get a taxi, a bus stops and pretends to
be full when the conductor sees Don Ramiros son trying to get on. The couple
finally hitch a lift on the back of a lorry but the drivers take them miles from the
station. In a moment of visual self-reflexivity, the shot of the laughing men in
the front seat is freeze-framed and then appears on the cover of a newspaper
with the caption: Bravo and Thank You! Liannes distinctive background en-
ables her to access this second version of light Paris the Paris that I hold so
dear and enlist its working citizens in the campaign to save the romance
between Jacques and Don Ramiros granddaughter. Though we never see
Lianne directly with the ordinary citizenry, it is clear that this is the world she
came from as a performer. Lianne, in fact, through her class mobility, personi-
fies the over-arching myth of the great Paris festival: that Paris, coded in
feminine terms, is a communal home for one and all.
Thus far I have suggested that both of Siodmaks musical films are suggestive
of the way the work of a prominent migr intersected with established modes
of urban representation in the sphere of Parisian entertainment during the
1930s. The films pay particular attention to the blurring of the stage and real
Paris, depicting the city, to a great extent, in concordance with an historically
and nationally specific relationship between performance and the urban pub-
lic. We have seen how this collusion extends to the depiction of on-screen com-
munities and their recognition in terms of the issue of class. But it seems appar-
ent, in terms of both narrative and textual style, that the films also relay a
certain sense of instability. This is suggested by a number of diegetic and ex-
tra-textual journeys between past and present. We have seen this in aspects of
the conclusion to La Vie Parisienne. To some degree, the components of Pari-
sian mythology reduce or reconvene the instability in the films particular hy-
brid nature but as I now contend, it is only through acknowledging the central-
ity of this hybridity to the films history and meanings that one can fully make
sense of how light Paris was pictured by various migrs. This duality or
two-way looking travelled outside the realm of the musical. By also examining
the case of a neglected migr urban film like Mauvaise graine, one can gain a
fuller picture of Paris beyond the immediate world of performance and enter-
tainment.
In a number of complementary contexts, La Vie Parisienne is a paradig-
matic example of the kind of hybrid cinema that the migr French cinema
City of Light 91
thus straddle the worlds of Paris 1900 and 1935. Dearly and Praince had
worked together previously in theatre and vaudeville and, in the same year as
the film was produced, they could be seen at the Thtre des Bouffes-Parisiens
in Les Popinod. Whilst Dearly also specialised in comedies of Parisian manners
(he created the notorious valse chaloupe with Mistinguett), Praince made her
name as a Parisienne in boulevard roles. Siodmaks version of La Vie Parisi-
enne thus contains a multiple history. It is a film made by a German, financed
by Americans, and set in Paris with a Parisian cast. It is the work of an migr
on his way to Hollywood but it makes explicit reference to Parisian entertain-
ment like the French Can-Can. Finally, it looks back to a distinctively French
genre which had evolved to include Viennese and American-influenced
off-shoots and had been recently reborn in Germany and re-exported back to
Paris to ward off American competition.
La Vie Parisienne not only offers a sense of hybridity in terms of its pro-
duction history and its eventual place in Parisian entertainment. By looking at
the films formal workings we can also discern a sense of journeying between
the practices and values of more than one place and time. It is appropriate,
therefore, that a key instance of this takes place in the intermediary space of the
international hotel. After a farcical sequence involving the raffish gadabouts,
Georges and Helenita, and a scene involving mistaken bedrooms, which could
have come from a Claudette Colbert vehicle, Jacques has returned to his
proper quarters. He observes Helenita through the net curtain in his room as
she gazes out over the city from her balcony. The idea of a character viewed
through the separating surface of a screen or curtain is in fact a recurrent visual
trope of the film. In le Grand Noir nightclub, for example, we see the arrival
of Jacques and Simone (Germaine Aussey) Liannes successor at La Vie Pa-
risienne by means of a camera track in front of a dividing black chiffon cur-
tain. This trope suggests the material doubling or splitting of the story world
that Elsaesser has also noticed, in parallel with the attention to the object, as a
frequent motif in Weimar exile cinema (2000, 89). For Elsaesser, this hesitation
or doubleness constitutes a clear investment in something other than, or
apart from, narrative as the depiction of character-centred action (92). I think
this is true, especially since the film continues to appropriate this form of
mise-en-scne by developing the notion of spatial separation in the way Jacques
appears to join Helenita. The point must be, however, that the mise-en-scne
does more than serve a formalistic argument; it also works to distinguish space
and light in gendered terms and thus here, it not only separates two bodies,
but two distinctive ways of seeing the city.
Jacques tiptoes out to the balcony, which is followed by an echo of the previ-
ous shot, which seems to confirm that he has joined Helenita screen right.
Siodmak then cuts to an overhead shot which dramatically realigns our spatial
City of Light 95
right, which confirms that all of what we have seen has been through her eyes.
Significantly, what follows is an exact duplication of the image of Jacques,
which enables the cinematic spectator to understand that the relationship be-
tween the performance on the street and the female protagonist has excluded
the male.
Later in the film, when the romance between the couple is in full bloom, the
two are seated together and a similar exchange of feeling between city dweller
and city performer takes place, this time at a specifically coded site of enter-
tainment: the nightclub. Because of Jacquess impecunious state he is forced to
tell Helenita that he is leaving her but the way he puts it is that he is leaving
Paris. It is good-bye to walking in the Bois every morning, strolling around
museums without looking at anything, he says. As the music strikes up an-
other song, he moves in closer to her. She motions to him to be quiet and then
turns away from him; her gaze screen left is distracted by the anticipation of
another performance by the chanteuse we saw earlier. This is her version of the
city, and it is the profoundly emotional power of the sung version of city-based
feeling that unites the lovers on screen. That this coupling is guided by the
seeming inter-relationship of subjectivities between the singer and the female
viewer marks the moment as distinctive. The granddaughter turns back to
look at Jacques. I love you, he says. A song begins as the camera slowly
glides in closer to the couple. Helenitas eyes turn down as she turns again to-
ward the chanteuse. We cut to a shot of the chanteuse centre stage to match her
gaze. The emotional momentum of the musical performance overwhelms the
scene and in the following shots, the granddaughter gets up from the table and
leads her lover to the dance floor where she begins to sing the song to Jacques.
It is as if, enabled by this moment, she can lure Paris back to him through song.
Elsaesser has also suggested (1984, 283) that the split between this cinema
of charged mise-en scne and particular French performance traditions pro-
duced a sense of unease and disorientation in a number of the French films
made by migr filmmakers. Like Vincendeau (1988, 49), he claims, that
trained mainly in the theatre or coming from the music-hall revue and the
Paris cabaret, the French actor [brought] to a role not only the carefully dis-
tilled observation of social types and the body language of an immediately re-
cognisable milieu, but the sense of an established rapport with an audience
(283). Elsaessers implication is that this performance tradition worked against
the visual style of the migr filmmaker in which the decor and the objects be-
come the mirror and repository of reaction and response (283). This case is not
as strong in the migr Parisian musicals for two inter-related reasons.
Firstly, if one looks at other French film versions of popular operettas such
as Mamzelle Nitouche (Marc Allgret, 1931)30 and Chacun sa chance
(Steinhoff and Pujol, 1930), one finds the same emphasis on visual doubling, il-
City of Light 97
lusion and play inherent in the diegesis and consequent visual style. It was
part of the genres form. There is a scene in Mamzelle Nitouche, for in-
stance, which is set backstage at a theatre. Floridor (Raimu) has to continue
sweet-talking Corinne (Edith Mera) despite the fact that she has heard of
Nitouches (Janie Marse) arrival. The comic conversation is shot from an
oblique angle, the other side of the mirror, so that the spectator sees the two
guiding the dialogue whilst simultaneously looking at their reflection in a mir-
ror that we, in fact, do not see. Much of the mise-en scne emphasises, in spatial
terms, the films narrative obsession with what one character or set of charac-
ters knows at the expense of the ignorance of the rest. In Chacun sa chance,
another key film from the period, the whole narrative hinges on disguise and
duplicity from the transposition of roles between an aristocratic Baron (Andr
Urban) and the shop worker Marcel (Jean Gabin), the emphasis on perfor-
mance, and on the blurring of the worlds of illusion and reality. This is her-
alded by the intriguing opening of the film. After a silent production credit se-
quence, an unseen host introduces the films cast who emerge in couples
from behind a stage curtain. This gives us a cue that the film is going to concern
itself with shifting roles and an unreliable fluidity between two types of acting:
that of the film star and that of the character the film star plays. The host
gives the command for the show to begin and we witness a musical prelude
with a concluding medium close-up of a conductor waving his baton looking
up at the closed stage curtains. The curtains then part and instead of the ex-
pected artifice of a designed set, we see a location shot of a busy Paris street at
night. The city as it is performed and the city as it really is something that
only the camera can capture are inextricably fused. What both of these exam-
ples reveal is that the film operetta was indeed a matter of knowingly accept-
ing deception and self-deception as the normal state of existence (Elsaesser,
2000, 351). What I believe is most telling are the ways in which Siodmak, as a
Weimar migr, was able to bring an eminently suitable ironic self-aware-
ness to his own interpretation of the genre during his stay in France.
The second way in which the migr musical actually fitted in with French
norms was in the way it showcased a meaningful hybridity regarding perfor-
mance. Instead of disrupting the established rapport with an audience,
Siodmaks mise-en-scne may actually have actively complemented the idea of
disparity already present in the use of stars. As Vincendeau (1988) suggests,
part of the rapport Parisian audiences of the era had with the screens per-
formers was the ways in which they were able to recognise their range of ge-
neric acting registers. The disparity between the extravagant comic perfor-
mance of Max Dearly and the mild matine manner of Georges Rigaud in La
Vie Parisienne, for example, actually enhances the utopian aspect of the
films narrative which finally reconciles the past and present versions of Paris.
98 City of Darkness, City of Light
Indeed, the mythical world of the La Vie Parisienne, that both Dearly and
Don Ramiro represent, can only really be made sense of in the present through
the contrast with the more modern-day, less theatrical, and perhaps, therefore,
American style that Rigaud represents. Elsaessers argument that a mode
of divided perception, and awareness of a double focus in narrative and repre-
sentation [was] one of the principles that the German cinema of the late
Weimar period seems to have carried into exile (1984, 280) does make sense in
relation to the film, but only if one applies it to the deliberate division in the
way the city is pictured.
We can see this division during a key musical number in the film which fea-
tures Georges and Don Ramiro and explores the intermingling between reality
and spectacle and, in turn, the intermingling of past and present. The sequence
begins in the transitory space of the contemporary hotel which, as we have al-
ready seen, is depicted using a modernist, linear design scheme. The two men
have returned with Helenita after a night out on the town. After leaving his fe-
male charge in her hotel room, Don Ramiro takes Jacques by the arm and sug-
gests they go out for more entertainment. Ah (...) to return to Paris!, he de-
clares. The camera tracks the two men as they move down the corridor. It stops
and the men exit the image screen left. There is a rapid wipe cut to the night-
club and the two reappear with their arms linked, as if by magic, screen right
from behind a pillar. It is as though they have transcended time and space,
which in a sense they have since the sophisticated luxury of the nightclubs
ambiance and entertainment promises a world embedded in a sense of the city
far removed from the exclusive geometric features of the facade of the modern
hotel.31
As Don Ramiro moves through the various social spaces of the hotel and
the nightclub, Paris of the past, which he embodies, is seen coming back to life.
What is interesting is how the returnee, dressing the part in top hat and tails,
commands the venues space. Modern-day Jacques is left to look on passively.
As the camera follows Don Ramiro across the floor and up the stairs he gestic-
ulates and dances as if he is in control of the spectacle. The film makes it clear
here, as it does in other instances throughout the narrative, that it is only
largely via the exuberance of music and performance that the past can be ac-
tively remembered. Don Ramiro seems to embrace the world around him and
because he is in constant motion, space is continuously being revealed to the
spectator. He continues to dance his way to the top of the stairway while a trail
of amused, mainly female, participants are led around the contours of a bar in
front of which he comes to a halt. This emphasis on circularity the antithesis
of the hotels modernist rectilinear style is reinforced in Colombiers extrava-
gantly swirling decor. In a medium close-up he is pictured singing Paris,
Paris, Paris, Paris!, a glass and bottle of champagne in respective hands. We
City of Light 99
cut to a sudden overhead view of the action from which Don Ramiro can be
seen with arms outstretched overlooking the stage-like space below on the
ground floor. On the final Paris, the stage figures start to move and the
show begins as if, through his agency, past Paris has been brought into the
present.
Siodmaks earlier musical, La Crise est finie, also reveals its hybrid nature
in a number of ways and points again to how the migr picturing of Paris
casts the city of the present as a staging area for a journey across time. The film
explicitly recalls earlier Parisian entertainments through the characters Ma-
dame Olga and the actress Suzanne Dehelly and through the setting of the
Elyse Clichy theatre. When the troupe arrives in Paris, Olga is recognised by a
waiter who used to work with her at the venue. She alludes to a past sexual
scandal involving the then director and when she arrives at the stage door she
recalls passing through the entrance garlanded with flowers. This instant of
nostalgia works in two ways. Firstly, it posits a continuum of stardom and per-
formance that involves the city. As with Lianne in La Vie Parisienne, the Paris
of live spectacle and glamourous entertainment is kept alive by an inter-rela-
tionship between the female body and memory. But secondly, this version of
worldly, metropolitan and sexually experienced femininity accentuates the
portrayal of provincial and optimistic innocence that Nicole represents.
Nicoles difference is also one of stardom. Danielle Darrieux was in the process
of becoming one of Frances leading female film stars. Unlike her co-star in the
film Albert Prjean who had already had a career in silent cinema and live en-
tertainment, Darrieux, because she was still very young, was completely iden-
tified with the new. With her debut in Le Bal, she began being promoted in
specifically French and cinematic terms so as to rival her Hollywood counter-
parts. This strategy is important, for although the film abounds with refer-
ences to the specificity of Paris and Parisian musicality, it also looks sideways
to the model of the contemporary Hollywood musical and its typical rendition
of the virtuous and dynamic young female seeking romance in the big city. In
fact, during and after its production history, La Crise est finie was consis-
tently compared to the Warner Brothers musicals of the time. M. Siodmak
makes La Crise est finie, a French 42nd Street was the headline for a vivid
on-the-set report of the filming.32
The film alludes to the scale and tenor of the American musicals of the time in
a manner unlike other French titles with similar music hall backgrounds such as
Paris-Bguin (Augusto Genina, 1931) and Zouzou (Marc Allgret, 1934). The
journal Candide even went so far as to say that in ten minutes, one can see on the
screen more original ideas than one can find in two hours of spectacle in one of
our large music halls.33 In Paris-Bguin, the social life, back-stage interaction,
and actual live stage numbers are centred around the star of the show, Jane Di-
100 City of Darkness, City of Light
amond, a more or less direct transposition of the star persona of the performer
Jane Marnac. Even the curtains of the revue bear her face. The film is thus a star
vehicle that deals with the encounter between the glamorous world of the
stage and the semi-underworld milieu with which Parisian theatre was then
geographically related in the areas around Pigalle and Montmartre in the 18th
arrondisement. The encounter is anticipated by the constant use of posters that
advertise Diamonds revue appearing in the background of street conversa-
tions. Marnac is constantly pictured centre frame and her mainly white and
sparkling attire is boldly lit to contrast with the darker clothing of the people
around her. This patterning is reinforced more broadly by the contrast between
well-lit interiors and more nocturnal street scenes. The bourgeois milieu of the
theatre itself, which is demarcated by the dress and demeanour of the audience,
indicates the evolving status of the revue-spectacle in Parisian society and its
alterity to the world of the apaches inhabited by Dd (Jean Gabin). With La
Crise est finie, however, Siodmak integrates the star performers into a narra-
tive model that involves putting on a show from scratch. Instead of inherent
plenitude, a display of vigour and an energetic spirit of resourcefulness is used
to suggest the effort involved in achieving a utopian outcome for all concerned.
This allows Siodmak to combine Parisian communality with the generic Holly-
wood musicals triumph against all odds la 42nd Street.
Light is foregrounded by the theft of some light bulbs from the home of a
young aristocrat. One of the girls from the troupe lures the man to his apart-
ment and we see each window being lit from an exterior long-shot as the cou-
ple enters each room. There is a close-up of hands unscrewing and removing
several light bulbs and then Siodmak cuts to a comic reversal of the previous
long-shot with the light in each window going out in time to a musical motif.
Rather than contrasting the street with the stage, Schfftan uses light to high-
light the disparity in attitude and degree of optimism among the members of
the troupe. At a critical moment in the film, for example, Marcel gesticulates in
an impassioned manner: be full of life, enthusiasm, colour, and light! His
raised arms are bathed in a strong, intense glow from above. Siodmak cuts
with irony to a lighting technician standing nearby whose body creases up in
sarcastic applause. As his body descends (in antithesis to Marcels) his crum-
pled features are defined against a pool of shadow. On his knees, now bathed
in real gloom, he says: we dont even have one light bulb! We return to Mar-
cel who declares: Now there is the crisis. He personifies it. The troupe suc-
ceeds but, in turn, so does the world of live spectacle for the disused theatre is
saved from being turned into a cinema and is returned to the city audience
whom it used to delight.34 In the films conclusion when the homonymic rela-
tionship between the title of the revue (and film) La Crise est finie and the
name of the theatre LElyse Clichy is most clearly underscored, the movie
City of Light 101
spectator is incorporated within the point of view of the Parisians who are
themselves in the process of re-becoming a theatrical audience. The paradox is,
of course, that the film is part of the spirit of crisis and displacement which the
films narrative seeks to obliterate.
The spectacular finale fuses the optimistic energy of the performance (and
the Parisian public) with a highly developed cinematic mise-en-scne. Like
Paris Bguin the musical number begins with a parade of Busby Berkeley-
esque revue girls pictured on top of a sequence of individual podiums. At this
moment both films seem to be simply recording the nature of the increasingly
Americanised French music hall tradition. But whereas Geninas film stays
with the stage and opts for an evermore elaborate choreography of multitudi-
nous chorus numbers, Siodmak breaks into the realm of cinematic invention. In
one sense these sequences serve as a kind of calling card from an migr versed
in a film culture preoccupied with (...) a fetishism of technique (Elsaesser,
1984, 282), but they also underline the twin paradoxes of making films about
theatre, and of German personnel making films about an alien culture with
one eye, perhaps, on the future filmmaking destination of Hollywood. We see
Marcel alone, playing the piano, in front of what appears to be a world map.
The superimposed words LA CRISE EST FINIE emerge screen right and curl
around the space of the frame. Eventually, after some inter-cutting with the
chorus-girls, the camera tracks out and reveals a blackened globe, lit in a swirl-
ing strobe-like fashion, with a number of girls in various national costumes on
top. The crisis is global but as Siodmak goes on to show, in the milieu of this
film, so are its resolutions. In the subsequent series of bizarre national tableaux
set in France, the United States, Russia and Great Britain we see money falling
from the sky like snow or confetti. Each country is introduced by an iconic im-
age of a major city so that we have a fascinating on-screen foretelling of one of
Siodmaks eventual fictional destinations: the crime-ridden world of noir New
York. This montage of the nations is immediately followed by Siodmaks cut to
the diegetic audience as if they have been watching this bravura display. The
theatre stalls are packed to the rafters with laughing Parisians. In this way, the
film has its urban cake and can eat it too. It pays attention to the Parisian past
and to the American future by integrating them both into the present. The
sequence ends with a close-up embrace of the romantic couple.
We have seen in La Crise est finie how the improvised community of the-
atrical performers plays with the artifacts of Paris for its own ends. In one
comic sequence we even see the troupe appropriate letters from a bank sign
Crdit Parisien to create the word Crise for their revue. The crisis,
emphasised in the title, represents the poverty and homelessness of the per-
formers and serves as a metonym for the external economic crisis that is beset-
ting France. This financial situation is also alluded to in Billy Wilders only
102 City of Darkness, City of Light
French migr feature Mauvaise graine, but in this case it probably also refers
to the personal legal and financial predicaments of many of its creators.35
Wilder, for example, left Berlin immediately after the Reichstag fire on 27 Feb-
ruary 1933 and had arrived in Paris with his girlfriend without a visa. Without
a work permit, he was forced to earn money from hand to mouth. He had, in
fact, been given the job of directing the film because the projects independent
producer was unable to pay for an established professional. The film depicts a
comical but effective community of thieves who also play in the city for their
own gain, stealing cars from the well off. The gang then refashion these vehi-
cles to disguise their origins and then resell them. Much of the film was shot on
location on the streets of Paris around Vincennes and the Bois de Boulogne,
preceding the Nouvelle Vague by several decades. The production had its own
peculiar set of hybridities and perspectives. It looks back to Berlin and it looks
forward to the United States, but it does so by incorporating a vivid and rhyth-
mic sense of the spaces of the Paris of that moment.
In Berlin, Wilder had worked as a writer with a keen interest in the sensibili-
ties of the modern city. As well as writing for the leading journals of the day
such as Tempo and Querschnitt, he helped on the bizarre sounding operetta Das
Blaue vom Himmel (Victor Janson, 1932) that was set in the Berlin U-Bahn
with singing and dancing commuters. He also had script credits on two impor-
tant Berlin films which heralded the pace and tone of Mauvaise graine. In
Menschen am Sonntag (Siodmak et al., 1929) we see a plein-air version of the
city in which quotidian reality is presented in a form not unlike a photo spread
in a typical photo magazine of the period. German critics of the film had actu-
ally made reference to its Parisian-like light touch by comparing it positively to
the negative intensity of typical Berlin representation. According to Der Abend,
once Paris was shown to us in an impressive, simple manner; now, we see
Berlin without the shine of advertisements in lights and the crazy nightlife of
bars (in Lally 1996, 33-34). In Mauvaise graine, there is an extended sequence
set around an open-air swimming pool on a Sunday afternoon which like
Menschen am Sonntag, Marcel Carns Nogent, Eldorado du dimanche
(1930) and Augusto Geninas Prix de beaut portrays a space made for move-
ment and release in contrast to the tensions of the weekday workplace. The
film recalls, as many have observed, the caper movie qualities of the loca-
tion-driven Emil und die Detektive (Gerhard Lamprecht, 1931) for which
Wilder also wrote the screenplay. Indeed, some of the Paris reviews picked up
on the relation between the soundtracks of the two films. Both features in-
volved a fellow migr of Wilders, Franz Wachsmann (de-Germanised to
Waxman). In Mauvaise graine he matched the spirit of the fast moving im-
ages of urban modernity to the speed of an American syncopated jazz score.36
The music also works to underline the consistent references to the recently
City of Light 103
vanished world of the silent cinema. The chase sequences between police and
criminals and the use of sight gags alludes to the American tradition of fast-
paced urban visual comedy exemplified by Mack Sennett and Harold Lloyd.
We can see this when the Zbre (Jean Wall) attempts to park his car by trying to
tie it to a lamppost. We see a close-up of a No Parking sign. The Zbre looks
at the sign to the explicit rhythm of the jazz with a succession of jump-cuts
bringing the sign closer and closer to the viewer and him. Thinking, he digs his
hands into his pockets, then approaches the sign and peels it away to reveal a
second message sens interdit which can be translated either as: this way
prohibited or, just as likely, as sense forbidden. This interest in modern vi-
sual humour is combined with a number of wipes, dissolves, and superimposi-
tions to break up time and space. More than one critic at the time noted that the
camera work and the music produced a sense of modernity to match the sub-
ject matter of the automobile in the city. One critic, in particular, saw it as a re-
freshing antidote to filmed theatre. In an approving tone, typical of the real
cinema debate mentioned in Chapter Two, he called Mauvaise graine a re-
action against the Pagnolisation of cinema.37
104 City of Darkness, City of Light
He argues that the Constructivist interest in the plasticity of the image and the
near-abstract attention to the details of form in Wilders film at times compete
with the more traditional space in the frame that is usually reserved for the ac-
tion of the French stars and the subsequent advancement of the diegesis. We
can see this jostling of viewing practices in relation to the city when we watch
Pasquier walking along the pavement after the loss of his treasured posses-
sion. His head and shoulders are superimposed over the forward motion of
the figure so there are in effect two patterns of movement. This duality is rein-
forced by the way the head and shoulders are shown in the style of a photo-
graphic negative to produce an ethereal, psychological impression over the
darkness of the main image. We then see his car being taken away in a
split-screen effect so that the action is repeated in the form of a mirror image on
both sides of the frame. The central character of Pasquier walking down the
street is superimposed onto two succeeding abstract shots: one of a close-up of
a car wheel spinning and the second, a close-up of the rapidly rotating hands
of a clock. After a cut-away shot, we return to Pasquier who is now gazing into
car showroom windows. Instead of simply making the shot a further example
of the viewing practices embodied in the idea of the city as spectacle, Wilder
complicates the mise-en-scne by re-employing the motif of visual doubling.
Pasquier is shot at an angle to the frame of the store window and, as he looks
longingly at the new car inside, he and the viewer see the reflection of a car
identical to his own pull up and super-impose itself onto the original object
of his attention. It is as if it is only when Pasquier sees his car come back to
life that he becomes a whole character again and Mingand is simulta-
neously allowed to re-establish his position as the star.
The second aspect of Wilders visual doubling lies in the motif of disguise
or an instability regarding appearance and reality. This is particularly true in
the case of Jeannette who performs the same kind of role of an available Pari-
sian woman in the street that Don Ramiro is seen watching from the vantage
point of an outdoor caf seat at the end of La Vie Parisienne. It is her job to at-
tract male car-owners so that they can then become the victims of the waiting
thieves. Much of the films rather skimpy narrative hinges on this sort of trick-
ery and deception, but it does lead to the third kind of visual doubling: the re-
lationship between Paris and the rest of France (and the world). When
Pasquier and Jeannettes boss become irritated by the complaints of gang
members about their cut of the take, he sends the couple on a mission to Mar-
seilles with a set of forged papers. It is at this point in the film that the narrative
itself literally splits in two. The couples journey south is shot as a sequence of
dissolving maps, emphasising the provincial towns they pass along the way to
Marseilles. They become embroiled in a high-speed car chase when the police
notice the smudged ink on their fake identity cards. Their passage across the
106 City of Darkness, City of Light
The Paris cinema auditorium of the 1930s was a place city dwellers largely en-
tered at night, attracted by the building faades display lights. Off the street,
the audience found themselves in darkness again for the duration of the eve-
nings main entertainment whilst images of the city were projected via light
onto the screen. Discussing the work of the novelist Emile Zola in relation to
the historical depiction of social experience in the French capital, Louis Cheva-
lier wrote: paradoxically (...) the triumph of light, for him, far from eradicated
the shadow and the past which it concealed. It actually accorded it a new form
of life as if light was a dazzling container for shadow (1980, 23). To unravel ex-
actly what the legacy of this sense of urban darkness meant in relation to the
migrs interpretation of Paris, we first need to consider the depiction of the
street and the emphasis on authenticity and social concern found in strains of
French realist cinema of the period. In a key polemical article Quand le cinma
descendra-t-il dans la rue? (When Will the Cinema Go Down the Street?), pub-
lished in Cinmagazine in November 1933, Marcel Carn anticipated the fasci-
nation that the streets of Paris would hold for filmmakers and filmgoers alike
throughout the decade.1 Carn called Paris the two-faced city. By this he
meant that according to established tropes of representation, Paris had been
divided in terms of place and class between the frivolous high life and the real
world of the ordinary urban dweller. Carn thought there had been too much
of the murky and inflated ambiance of night clubs, dancing couples, and a
non-existent nobility at the expense of the simple life of humble people (...)
the atmosphere of hard-working humanity (in Abel 1993, 129). Since the de-
velopment of Haussmanisation in the nineteenth century, the simple life of
humble people had, to a large extent, become associated with darkness in the
medical and socio-scientific writings of the day. Writers frequently stressed the
association between the proliferation of disease and the darkness of the typical
Parisian overcrowded faubourg. Tuberculosis is the disease of darkness the
Commission dExtension de Paris wrote in 1913, for example. To combat it ef-
fectively, one must first of all oppose it with its natural enemy, the sun (in
Evenson 1979, 211). How did the Parisian cinema of the migrs fit into this
equation? Did the traditions of visualising Berlins urban space, and the narra-
tive possibilities that space contained, spill over into films made about the
French capital? When he implored that the camera go into the streets, Carn
108 City of Darkness, City of Light
migr film Liliom. The sets were by Andr Andrjew who had also worked
with Pabst, on Lopra de quatsous (1931), and the distinctive edgy melan-
cholia of the score was written by Bertolt Brechts former collaborator, Hanns
Eisler.5 At an important preliminary press reception for the film, even fellow
migrs Joe May and G.W. Pabst were on hand to lend support. The story of
the film concerns a war widow and her two sons who live in an impoverished
quartier of the capital. Jacques (Jean-Pierre Aumont) refuses the path of steady
employment taken by his brother and falls in with a band of small-time street
criminals. A romance develops between him and Rosalie (Madeleine Ozeray),
the niece of a local second-hand goods dealer. Jacques becomes involved in a
local burglary and after the accidental death of the elderly victim he goes on
the run from the law. After days spent in the streets and on the riverbanks of
Paris the police catch him but he is saved from prison by his mother
(Marcelle-Jean Worms) who makes a special plea by arguing that her son is a
victim of social circumstances.
Dans les rues was based on a novel by the populist novelist Joseph-Henri
Rosnay an. The term populisme signified an interest in the lives of ordinary
Parisian people and was a matter of contemporary interest amongst the citys
intelligentsia. It had been made the subject of a polemical manifesto by Lon
Lemonnier in LOeuvre in 1929 and in 1930, a populist literature prize was cre-
ated and won by Eugne Dabits Htel du nord. The following year, the journal
Monde sponsored a written debate on the topic which included contributions
from Lemonnier as well as Henri Poulaille. Poulaille, the author of Populisme
(1930), then wrote his own manifesto in 1932 which was co-signed by a num-
ber of film-related figures such as Georges Altman and Marcel Lapierre.6 It was
this trend in literature that Marcel Carn had turned to as a model for the kind
of cinematic representation of the city that he envisaged. Indeed, he was, of
course, to direct his own version of the Dabit novel in 1937, starring Jean-Pierre
Aumont.7 In Carns clarion call he praised the number of novelists [who]
have not been afraid to study certain quarters of Paris and seize the hidden
spirit under the familiar facade of their streets (in Abel, 129). This conflation
of novelistic intention and the idea of uncovering a hitherto unexplored social
reality is a key element in the set of inter-textual cultural practices concerning
the discussion of dark Paris which go back, as in the case of spectacular
Paris, to the nineteenth century.
With the growth of the city due to the pressures of industrialisation, came an
increased anxiety on the part of the Parisian authorities about the classes
dangereuses and their perceived natural milieu the darkened streets in the
working class urban areas untouched by the brightness of modernity. This anx-
iety led to an ever-widening social division, especially in the way the capital
was imagined by its citizens. As Schlr (1998, 123) points out, on the one hand,
110 City of Darkness, City of Light
it [was] a matter of keeping the areas and regions thought of as potentially dan-
gerous under perpetual surveillance (...) [whilst] on the other hand, the areas of
the city regarded as potentially endangered [had] to be saved and protected from
the penetration of crime. Darkness thus meant more than just the natural
correlation to illumination (be it from daylight or artificial sources), it also sug-
gested an ill-focused combination of danger and immorality. Above all, for the
citys bourgeoisie, it suggested the perilous seduction of the unknown. Narra-
tives such as Eugne Sues hugely successful Les Mystres de Paris, serialised be-
tween 1843-44, capitalised on these themes to represent a city which needed to
be investigated because of this profusion of darkness. The contemporaneous
expansion of the polices functions and its methodologies of detection was par-
alleled by a culture of revelation. In the fiction of writers like Sue, Hugo and
Zola, this process often meant an exploration of the city at night. Similarly, in
the musical tradition of the chanson raliste, the feeling and suffering of those
who came from the darkened streets was actually relayed to an audience as
nighttime pleasure. In the visual arts, Courbets Realist Manifesto of 1855
proclaimed the painterly desire to know, in order (...) to translate the customs,
the ideas [and] the appearance of my epoch (in Rubin 1997, 158), and the early
Parisian photographic work of Gaspard-Flix Nadar and Charles Marville also
specialised in seeing the streets of ordinary Paris in new ways.
We can summarise these sources by claiming that what they had in com-
mon was a set of assumptions which played on two inter-related variables:
firstly, a sense of ethnographic curiosity about the social other and, secondly,
an interest in urban marginality and the equation between class and darkness.
To show how clearly Dans les rues assimilated these codes of Parisian repre-
sentation, there is an introduction to both of these tropes in the films trailer. It
commences with a high-angled close-up view of the cobblestones of a Parisian
street. The edges of the silhouettes of residents are visible crossing the top part
of the screen and as the camera begins to track backwards, moving vehicles en-
ter the frame in the reverse direction. The effect is of an almost voyeuristic
opening up of a detailed social world based on the motif of the everyday or
typical in motion. An introduction to the cast follows which begins with the
musical and emotional register of the chanson raliste. Charlotte Dauvia is seen
knitting and singing in a medium close-up shot of her behind a caf bar. Her
figure is linked to the world of the quartier in two ways. Firstly, through visual
repetition as the camera tracks back in the same revelatory motion as the pre-
ceding shot and then, secondly, in the lyrics of her song about the Paris work-
ing class milieu of Belleville and the Parc des Buttes-Chaumont. The song con-
tinues as the following shots of the films leading characters convey the
impoverished milieu that the narrative inhabits. The greys and dark areas of
City of Darkness 111
the ordinary interiors frame the set of predominately melancholic faces to sug-
gest a naturalism committed to revealing life as it is led.
This notion of revealing life as it is led is furthered by the integrated use
of more documentary type footage of horse racetracks and crowds, children
playing and couples dancing. These kinds of images that convey the leisure
and pleasures of typical Parisians were also found in the pages of the numer-
ous urban photo albums of the period and the new photo-journalistic periodi-
cals such as Lucien Vogels Vu (established 1928) and the highly successful il-
lustrated city newspaper Paris-Soir (established 1931). In the words of the
editors of the latter: the image has become the queen of our time. We are no
longer satisfied to know, we want to see (in Warehime 1996, 6-7). The develop-
ment of photographic publishing had in part been based on the success of Ger-
man Weimar counterparts such as Berliner Illustrite Zeitung. Indeed, Dans les
rues can also usefully be compared with the realist impulses of a Zille film
such as Mutter Krausens Fahrt ins Gluck (Piel Jutzi, 1929) which in sec-
tions of its narration re-presented, in cinematic terms, print documentary
photo-spreads of the modern city.8 Both films do incorporate moments of polit-
ically guided vrit footage, but there is a vital difference. The harshness of the
Berlin in Mutter Krausen is largely seen as the brutal consequence of an un-
caring and failed economic project that must be opposed by organised resis-
tance. The Paris of Dans les rues, on the other hand, whilst still a place of so-
cial hardship, is also a site of collaborative play, communal pleasure, and
improvised satire.
The trailer of Trivass film also makes direct reference to the visual codes of
expressive darkness which had surfaced throughout the heyday of the Berlin
late silent cinema in features like M (Fritz Lang, 1931) and Asphalt (Joe May,
1929). To a large extent, it does this by using night in relation to notions of de-
sire and criminality. In a close up of two lovers embracing at night against a
backdrop of inky darkness, the edges of the males cap and jacket are illumi-
nated by a strong, direct light source. Later, a dramatically lit nighttime gang
fight is pictured in medium-long shot to utilise the expressive inter-relation-
ship between the shadowy architectural space of the street and the criminal
sub-culture. This is a move away from the naturalistic model of ordinary city
life to a stylised form of visual commentary which is designed to evoke sensa-
tions of danger and hitherto hidden feeling. This patterning of the city at night,
it must be said, is also evident in the work of a number of prominent photogra-
phers of the time including Marcel Bovis, Ren Jacques and especially the fel-
low migr from Hungary, Brassa. In his photos of nighttime Paris taken in
the 1930s, and published either in popular photographic journals or deluxe art
books for the connoisseur, Brassa skillfully examined the congruence of night
and secrecy. Paul Morand, in his introduction to the photographers first book
112 City of Darkness, City of Light
Paris de nuit, (published the same year as Dans les rues), wrote that night [in
Brassas work] is not the negative of day; black surfaces and white ones are
not merely transposed, as on a photographic plate, but another picture alto-
gether emerges at nightfall (in Warehime, 1996, 63). In Brassas own essay
Techniques de la photographie de nuit, republished in 1933 in the annual
photography issue of Arts et Mtiers Graphiques, he actually equated the city at
night with a darkened studio set (in Warehime, 35). These themes clearly oc-
cur in Trivass film, which used a significant amount of nighttime location
footage. Indeed, in one production report, Trivass distinctive use of Paris at
night was highlighted by the journalist concerned. All last week Victor Trivas
has been shooting location scenes for his film Dans les rues around the quays
of the Seine and Pariss distant quartiers, the author commented. It has been
a veritable peaceful revolution in the quiet streets around Ivry where a number
of dramatic scenes have been directed during nighttime shoots.9
Mention of Brassas name returns one to the French literary inter-text for
Dans les rues in that Brassa illustrated articles by two leading writers who
made their own contributions to the visualisation of 1930s Paris in the dark. The
detective novelist Georges Simenon and poet-essayist Pierre Mac Orlan were
similarly fascinated by the ambiguities of the after-hours intersection of light
and shadow on the streets of the city. Simenon, himself an migr of sorts be-
cause of his Belgian origins, actually wrote many years later that he equated
learning about Paris in terms of night. You really get to know Paris, silhouette
by silhouette, he argued ( in Ford and Jeanne, 1969, 77). The popularity of his
fiction and that of other detective writers such as Lo Malet is indicative of the
general proliferation of crime-related fiction during the period that had been
fostered as much by the success of recent American urban crime writing in
translation as the popularity of pre-established local narrative traditions.10 This
phenomenon very quickly spilled over into French film culture. Three of
Simenons early Maigret novels were filmed and made into important French
dark city productions: La Tte dun homme (Julien Duvivier, 1932), Le Chien
jaune (Jean Tarride, 1932) and La Nuit du carrefour (Jean Renoir, 1932). Mac
Orlan also referred to Paris as the city of darkness in his revealing text Le Fan-
tastique (1926). It is important to note that he had proposed a new way of look-
ing at urban reality which linked the emergent mass medium of the cinema
with the privileged gaze of a certain kind of urban spectator. [Y]ou could say
that the cinema has made us notice the social fantastic of our times, he wrote.
All you have to do is wander the night to understand that new lighting has cre-
ated new shadows (quoted in Ford and Jeanne, 122). Furthermore, in 1932, the
year before the release of Dans les rues, Mac Orlan had written a revealing arti-
cle on Piel Jtzis film adaptation of Berlin Alexanderplatz11 entitled Le Ralisme
de certains films voque le fantastique social. In this fascinating piece, he ex-
City of Darkness 113
Maurice Chevalier. The surface irony of both of these moments and the explicit
appeal to conceptions of Parisian performance and lightness are the reverse of
Dans les rues in which darkness takes over and the references to cinematic
form and appearance are so insistent.
One of the continuing traits of French realist cinemas depiction of the
world of the Parisian quartier of the early 1930s was an almost ethnographic
concern for the listing, portraying and recording of the ordinary world of the
city. Anatole Litvak and Victor Trivas appear to have for the most part shared
this project. We know that one of Litvaks avowed intentions was indeed to
make what he termed real cinema. This concern was manifested not just in
terms of the possibilities of the cinematic image, but also in terms of an interest
in sound and its descriptive properties. Urban sounds form, for example, a key
mode of expression in French films like Faubourg Montmartre (Raymond
Bernard, 1931) and La Petite Lise (Jean Gremillon, 1930). At the end of the for-
mer, the world of the city is specifically recalled as one of the main characters
listens to the noise and clamour of Paris from the other end of a telephone line.
Genevive Sellier (1989, 89) has noted that La Petite Lise deserves attention
because of the very fact that as an attempt to break with the sheer plasticity of
the film image [it uses] the counterpoint of sound chosen for its realism. This
subject of recording the city has a complex genealogy. Rifkin (1995, 103) has
persuasively related the taxonomic interest of such pivotal figures as Pierre
Mac Orlan in urban aural and visual ephemera to the overlapping language
of guidebooks [and] urban tourism, and the nineteenth century tradition of
Parisian Physiognomies or Typologies.15 He draws attention to the interest Mac
Orlan had in radio and recorded Parisian music he authored several radio
documentaries during the period including a series on the accordion. Interest-
ingly, Dans les rues and Coeur de lilas directly feature several close-ups of
radios and gramophones in communal moments, either in the Legrand family
home or in the family space of the caf. Similarly, they both gain in effect
from the use of natural recorded Parisian noise. In the opening of Coeur de
lilas, Litvak choreographs an expressive and evocative inter-relationship be-
tween the sounds of local non-professional Parisians, the whistling of a pass-
ing train and the uneasy melancholia of a typical Parisian street organ-grinder.
The attempt to capture real Paris pictorially, as well as aurally, is evident in
the early work of the French director Pierre Chenal.16 Chenal worked on several
documentary short films about Parisian architecture and city life such as Les
petits mtiers de Paris (1931-32) which had actually contained a commentary
spoken and written by Mac Orlan. The film was praised by the critic A.
Bourgoin for its ability to know how to find the picturesque in places where
one would imagine coming across nothing more than the most unimaginative
banality.17 Bourgoins notion of the combination of the urban commonplace
City of Darkness 117
and the picturesque is a key point; not least of all because it also reoccurred in
several migr features. It is there explicitly in Dans les rues, for example,
when Jacques takes to the streets on the run from the law and we see a wistful
analogy drawn between his social isolation and the ongoing lives of river work-
ers hauling bricks onto the banks of the Seine. The predominance of images
captured in documentary-like long-shot contrasts effectively with the tightly-
knit claustrophobia of the previously foregrounded set design of the quartier. It
is also there in the depiction of the detailed open spaces of the Parisian zone at
the beginning of Coeur de lilas which features an iconography of factory-
scapes, railway lines, wastelands and marginal lives. These picturesque but ev-
eryday visual motifs, along with the atmospheric banks of the urban canal net-
works, were found in a significant number of other 1930s French films such as
Marcel Carns Jenny, La Goualeuse (Fernand Rivers, 1938) and La Mater-
nelle (Marie Epstein and Jean Benoit-Lvy, 1934). They have come to be seen
as a distinguishing component of the term poetic realism.
118 City of Darkness, City of Light
The phrase poetic realism was actually coined by Jean Paulhan, the editor of
La Nouvelle Revue franaise, in a 1929 review of Marcel Ayms populist novel La
Rue sans nom. The novel was adapted by Pierre Chenal in 1932 in a feature of the
same name. The critical reception of an early, totally French poetic realist film
such as La Rue sans nom is of crucial interest regarding any discussion of the
Paris of the German migrs. It becomes evident that such films coincided with
an attentiveness in French film culture towards the depiction of the French capi-
tal that, in fact, had as much to do with national cultural prestige as social con-
cern. Therefore, it was important that being for or against the tendency to go
down the streets meant more than just uncovering the hidden spirit under the
familiar faade of the city. It also meant the possibility of taking of sides on the
issue of the creation of a French sound cinema that could be as worthy of inter-
national esteem as that of the German cinema of the silent period.
For the writer Michel Gorel, for example, La Rue sans nom merited a re-
turn to the terms poetic and realist largely because of the way it con-
structed a distinctively French vision of tenement life: Ive said realism and
Ive also said poetic because even in treating such a hard and brutal subject,
Chenal never renounces poetry. The most beautiful scenes of the film are per-
haps those where the characters, who have been gradually worn down by the
stones of the hovels where they are imprisoned, try to escape, some by love,
others by wine, adventure, revolt.18 One simply cannot imagine a German
critic making the same references to wine, romance, and revolution. Another
reviewer noted that Chenal had made a powerful and sober film which im-
mediately catapults him to the premier league of German directors.19 For
many French critics of the period, this allusion to the sophisticated and crafted
style of the German street films of the 1920s such as Pabsts Die freudlosse
Gasse, also meant an occasion to come down on one side of the debate over
whether cinema should turn to the theatre or to the social world of real Paris
for its point of reference. Jean Fayard in Candide saw La Rue sans nom in terms
of another chance to condemn that execrable genre: the slice of life20 whilst
Gringoires critic argued that the film was far superior to not just the
uncinematic form of filmed operetta but also German Expressionist cinema.
Implying that Chenals film transcended the Germanic for something distinc-
tively Parisian, he claimed that whats even better [in the film] is the impres-
sion left that [the modelling] has nothing to do with morbidity.21 As we have
already seen, this reference to morbidity must be taken simply as racially
motivated shorthand for Jewishness.
City of Darkness 119
The debate over the turn to realist depictions of life in the French capital
should be seen in the context of the competition which early French sound cin-
ema also faced from the United States. If commentators of the period fre-
quently referred to German city cinemas heavy and sombre concerns, the con-
sensus was that Hollywoods version of urban life also had its own particulari-
ties. In an article commenting on the contemporary popularity of the city
crime drama in French, German and Hollywood film releases, the journalist
and script-writer Paul Bringuier noted how films such as City Streets and
Scarface (Howard Hawks, 1932) relied on a conjugation of violent narratives
taken from the headlines and a visceral mise-en-scne which sacrifices every-
thing for gesture and movement.22 This tendency to categorise different ver-
sions of cinematic urban realism had a wider significance beyond the French
film industrys need to compete on an international level with its German and
American counterparts. It also fed into the growing tide of cultural xenopho-
bia involving differing notions of where the direction of Frances modernity
actually lay. In this sense, the dark city film became, in part, a staging ground
for a wider set of cultural anxieties. Here, the entertainment and economic
model of the United States was not just applauded for its energetic dynamism,
invention and brightness, it was also denigrated for its vulgarity and excesses.
Writers such as Paul Achard may have praised the efficiency, standardisation,
and comfort of the American system in glowing texts such as A New Slant On
America, but for Paul Morand, in Champions du monde, the United States was a
society weak in the head, infantile, lacking natural curbs or morality (in
Weber, 95). Again and again, these anxieties surfaced in moralistic discourses
about the cinematic representation of urban life. American cities were seen as
too violent and corrupt compared to place like Paris. Films like City Streets
showed the dark criminal excesses of modern urban life which had resulted
from a society that favoured the individual over the warmer pleasures of com-
munity.
This emphasis on the fixities of national identity makes for an interesting, even
almost contradictory situation when it comes to looking at the world of the Pa-
risian quartier depicted by the Berlin migrs. I would like to therefore now
turn to Coeur de lilas as an example of the complexities involved when talk-
ing of the representation of Paris in migr poetic realist cinema. The film de-
rives its title from the name of Lilas (Marcelle Rome), a local girl whose glove
is found near the corpse of Novian, a murdered industrialist, on the wasteland
of the fortifications in the northeastern part of Paris.23 Following what he be-
lieves to have been the wrongful arrest of one of Novians employees, Detec-
tive Lucot (Andr Luguet) adopts the disguise of an unemployed mechanic to
penetrate Lilass milieu and comes into conflict with a former lover of Lilas
120 City of Darkness, City of Light
24
the louche apache Martousse (Jean Gabin). There is a police raid and now in
love with the object of his search, Lucot makes off with Lilas to the centre of
Paris. The couple ends up on the banks of the River Marne but the law catches
up with Lilas and eventually she turns herself into the police.
Unlike many later successful poetic realist films such as La Bte humaine
and Quai des brumes, Coeur de lilas was based on an original stage produc-
tion. The film went into production in August 1931. Looking at the full credits
for Coeur de lilas, apart from the name of Litvak, one sees the names of other
Russians such as the set designer Serge Pimenoff and assistant director Dimitri
Dragomir. Prominent French personnel were also involved such as the com-
poser Maurice Yvain who was later the co-writer of the famous song Quand
on spromne au bord de leau in Julien Duviviers La Belle quipe (1936). In the
words of Alexandre Arnoux, Coeur de lilas is at once a detective story, a
sentimental comedy and a picturesque portrait of the underworld. (...) It is also
a slice of life by Charles-Henry Hirsch, seasoned, perhaps with some under-
ground irony by Tristan Bernard, as a Cornellian tragedy, a debate between
passion and duty in the soul of a police agent.25
Despite the number of non-French personnel working on the production,
Coeur de lilas, like La Rue sans nom, was received in the French press as an
example of national cultural specificity. The reason for this may be two-fold.
Firstly, there was the aforementioned critical interest in building up a dis-
tinctly French sound film output to match the critical prestige of German ur-
ban cinema and Hollywoods own dark city features such as City Streets and
the frequently referred to Underworld (Joseph von Sternberg, 1927). Many of
the films critics saw Coeur de lilas as a specifically Parisian crime film be-
cause it was not as driven by violence and sensation. The film depended on a
sense of urban communality at the expense of individualistic action. The
Americans have gangster films; we have films of the milieu, wrote Avenir.26
Georges Champeux in Gringoire also noted that the film isnt about the gang-
sters of Broadway. Because it is set in Mnilmontant, it is in another style. First
of all, there are fewer corpses (...) and then material concerns give way to
higher things. Thugs, girls, police officers, the milieu and all that surrounds
them have only one thing on their mind: love.27 Secondly, it was perceived as
French because of the way that nationally specific locations and acting styles
were then being prioritised in French critical discourse. Writing in Cin Miroir,
in a later interview with Andr Luguet, Claude Dor, in referring to Coeur de
lilas, noted that it is impossible to find the atmosphere of a Parisian street, a
bal musette, or a restaurant on the banks of the Marne anywhere else than in our
home country and with French Parisian actors. The success of films of this
kind shows that it is possible to make films which, instead of being interna-
City of Darkness 121
inside and outside that emerges because Coeur de lilas was made partly by
non-Parisians. The film may display a sophisticated awareness of the iconog-
raphy and popular culture of a typical French urban milieu, but it does so by
utilising the faculties of the outsider.
By looking at the preliminary section of the film, we can see that it does
more than introduce a number of motifs which will reoccur throughout the
course of the narrative. There is also evidence of the co-existence of a conven-
tional urban realism and the same modernist visual aesthetic that we have no-
ticed previously in migr Paris films like Wilders Mauvaise graine. The
film begins in the zone the ring of wasteland which surrounded Paris as a bar-
rier of sorts between the walled defences of the fortifications and the industrial-
ised inner suburbs spreading out from the official borders of the capital. The
fortifications themselves were built between 1841 and 1845 under Prime Mini-
ster Adolphe Thiers in order to stave off a Prussian military invasion. In 1860,
Thiers had extended the capitals boundaries to include the string of suburban
villages such as Belleville, La Chapelle and Montmartre into the orbit of offi-
cial Parisian culture. Because the fortifications had failed as a defence, it was de-
cided to demolish them after the First World War, although the intact gates
continued to serve a financial purpose until 1930 through the levying of
city-related taxes. At the time of the making of Coeur de lilas, the geograph-
ical margins of the zone clearly represented a topographical notion of Pari-
sian-ness in rapid transition. In fact, these areas were already included in a cul-
tural mythology of Parisian marginality. Indeed, as Rifkin (1995) suggests, it
was precisely because these margins were already the myth materials of a lit-
erary treatment of city spaces and social differences, and were already signifi-
ers of nostalgia, [that] the threat to their actual existence could only elevate
their status in systems of representation (28).
The first visual motif that is introduced is that of the world of male social
authority which eventually presides over Lilass fate. This is prefigured in the
opening depiction of the military troops marching. Throughout the film, each
part of the city is accompanied by a different register of music and in this in-
stance the regimented rhythm of the refrain matches the image of coordinated
control which the framing of the line of figures represents. The camera moves,
in a clockwise pan, away from the soldiers disappearing across a bridge to a
gang of boys who are following their elders example. The youths are kept
mainly in the middle distance of the image and we are able to see the expan-
sive industrial wasteland all around them. Their role play comes to a halt
when a younger member of the troupe approaches the Major to tell him that
he doesnt want any more war. The gang switches to cops and robbers and
they make off to an open area where in the course of their game a real police in-
vestigation is instigated when a real corpse is discovered. This switching of
City of Darkness 123
roles and the playing around with disguises is another trope that will reoccur
throughout the film. The change to cops and robbers is echoed by a new,
more informal, musical register. The film at this point cuts to a medium
close-up of a blind organ grinder whose haunting and repeated melody con-
tinues as we see the children spill over the rubble and forlorn open space of the
fortifications.
As news of the crime spreads, another aspect emerges: that of the com-
munality of the working class milieu in which the film is mainly set. People ap-
pear to enter the frame from all sides and in a rapid succession of shots, mainly
composed of fleeting low-angled impressions of figures, the sense emerges of
a social world being pulled together. (The opposite effect is produced later in
the film when the police raid the street. Here, Litvak portrays this subsequent
dispersal of figures into the crevices of the built environment through a mon-
tage of high-angled shots to underline the fragmentation of something previ-
ously whole and seemingly integrated). As the people gather near the site of
the crime, we see the first of many shots which begin with a static image of a
character or two from the crowd. This kind of shot then typically starts to track
or pan across several other faces to produce a unifying sense of inclusion and
shared values. In this case, the camera moves in a gentle circular motion away
from two figures conversing to pick up snatches of commentary from other in-
dividuals. A sense of a specific social world is enhanced by the uniform dress
codes and the way the characters, as they enter the frame, seem to continue the
conversation of the witnesses that have preceded them. The sequence is also
distinguished by the fact that it is the only time the community beyond the
main characters speaks on screen. Partly because of the use of real city loca-
tions, which adds a dimension of vrit, and partly because of this sense of au-
dible and visual eavesdropping on a pre-existing milieu, this moment has a
peculiarly semi-documentary edge which is absent from the stylisation of the
later studio sequences. In one of the films production reports it is mentioned
how locals from the Porte de Clichy area were recruited to appear in this
scene.29
This sense of social documentation is furthered by the inclusion of details of
the subsequent police operation. Foregrounding the work of the police photog-
rapher through a striking close-up of a camera lens opening to the sound of an
off-screen train whistle achieves two things. Firstly, it draws attention to the
recording or documenting of a verifiable reality as if to underline the authentic-
ity of the films visual narrative. But, secondly, as a moment of striking visual
intensity, it seems to call particular attention to the pictorial and material nature
of the cinematic image. After the close-up of the lens, the screen fades to black.
We then see a shot of the corpse itself surrounded by the feet of the crowd. This
image dissolves into a printed, still photographic version on the cover of the
124 City of Darkness, City of Light
set in Ren Clairs Quartorze juillet, for example, it is noticeable that there is
no identifiable exit to the design of the street. The world beyond the top of the
stairs at one end or beyond the corner of the alleyway at the other is never
glimpsed. This makes the milieu immediately darker. Whilst the wasteland
and railway scenes evoke space through the use of a wide-angle lens and the
inclusion of significant tracts of sky and clouds, there is a strong tight-knit as-
pect to the way the street is framed.
This concentration of effect is underscored by the reliance on artificial light
sources and the frequent dramatic and pointed contrasts between darkness
and light in Courants distinctive photography. Indeed, this collusion between
migr cinematography and set design was commented upon in another pro-
duction report which appeared in the film press. The designer and the camera
operator appear to be in the middle of developing a strange world which un-
der the harsh light of the projectors is confounding the separation between fic-
tion and reality wrote a journalist from Le Courrier.32 As in the relationship be-
tween Andrjew and the cinematographer Rudolph Mat in Dans les rues,
the correlation here between the modulated light of Courant and the distinc-
tive space of Pimenoffs street set is particularly noticeable in the treatment of
the city at night.
The mise-en-scne, as a whole, exemplifies a non-naturalistic novelistic or
theatrical approach to the depiction of social space. This is seen in the techni-
cally virtuosic introduction to the world of the street which, because of its inte-
gration of song and mobile camera, exemplifies a kind of consciously staged
display. The sequence begins with a close-up of a hand turning the crank of
some window shutters. The sound of the organ grinder can be heard again. It
is almost as if the turn of the crank and the off-screen turn of the organ become
one, creating an intense correlation between music and the physical space of
the street. As the camera begins to track left, the window begins to fill the
frame to suggest the opening up of the world to the spectators gaze. The light
from the interior of the bal musette illuminates the darkness outside. As the
tracking shot continues, the figure turning the crank reverts to a shadow and
the details of the milieu the familiar tropes of net curtains and drink logos
are seen more clearly. Other figures enter the frame, including the organ
grinder himself, before the camera begins to tilt upwards and the words of a
song begin. The silhouette of a street lamp fills the right-hand part of the frame
and in the rear of the image some of the streets occupants exit round the cor-
ner of a hidden alley. The strength of the artificial light source emerging from
this out of view path also reduces these figures to silhouettes. The camera co-
mes down to street level again and begins to rotate leftwards until a stone pub-
lic stairway fills the frame. A man is seen lighting a cigarette for a girl and as
the camera begins to ascend the stairs in conjunction with a passing couple, a
126 City of Darkness, City of Light
pair of women come into view perched on the railings. The female voice is
singing about her life as a prostitute and the lives of the people that we are
watching. The lyrics of the song, Dans la rue (Serge Veber, Maurice Yvain), refer
to the ending of the day and her work on the street at night.33 The silence of the
locals, the hovering sense of gloom and the watchful circumscription of the
mobile camera produce a distinctive tone of voyeurism, of examining some-
thing ordinarily hidden. Finally, the shot dissolves into a medium close-up of a
large middle-aged woman, La Douleur (Frhel), singing and washing her
tights on a balcony. At this point in the song she refers to the appeal that her
silk stockings have for male customers. La Douleurs gaze is turned down-
wards to the world that has just been explored. It is as if she is both singing to
herself and singing to the street. The camera now turns to track leftwards and
through the dramatic perspective of the upper ironwork of the gateway, which
borders the street and the apartment block from where she is singing, the street
which we have come from reappears. The camera tilts down slightly so we can
see people descending the steps. From this aerial vantage point the camera
moves leftwards, further across in space and beyond the gate, to gaze down at
the entire street as if from a birds eye view. The coordinates of the whole set
have now been made sense of in a complex inclusive fashion which has linked
the movement of the residents and the probing camera to the spatial arrange-
ment of the buildings. There is one last cutaway shot to the world beyond a
night-sky view of a factory before we return to the milieu where the action
will now unfold.
Andr Andrjews set design for Dans les rues also privileges certain
viewing relations regarding the world of the street. For example, the film fea-
tures a number of high-angle shots looking down from the rooftops at the in-
tegrated milieu below. What is even more significant, however, is the way that
the relationships between domestic space and external street space are man-
aged through the prominent incorporation of the staircase which acts both as
a dramatic device and an iconographical element. In his perceptive review of
the film, Souillac argues that the staircases in Dans les rues are unforgetta-
ble; for him the staircase is the soul of the humble milieu the film represents.34
Souillac is undoubtedly thinking of the way the film acknowledges the cen-
trality of this communal area in the everyday experience of the Parisian tene-
ment dweller but Trivass film appropriates Andrjews designs in more ways
than one. Firstly, the staircase is used to link the individual to the community.
This is evident in the opening sequence which takes place in the living room
of Jacquess family. As with Coeur de lilas, the film begins with military
marching music, this time on the radio. The musics connotations of patriar-
chal order and stability underscore a sense of absence that is represented by
the image on the wall of Jacquess dead father in a military uniform. Just as
City of Darkness 127
Coeur de lilas moves from the soldiers to the freedom of the street children
playing, Dans les rues moves from this settled domesticity to the allure of
the street below. There is a cut to a shot from the window of a boy calling from
the pavement. When Jacques leaves his home the camera does not move di-
rectly to the street. Instead, he is first seen on the landing outside and only af-
terwards does the camera follow him all the way down. As he descends, a
whole world of local residents opens up before us from a cleaner, children at
play, figures at a window sill to the sounds of people in their homes. Jacques is
portrayed as part of all this. A high-angle shot of him sliding down the banis-
ter dissolves into a high-angle shot of the cobblestones to emphasise his
descent from the integrated world of the tenement block onto the world of
the street.
The staircase, on the other hand, is also used to connote tension and menace
in the Germanic sense of a psychological rendering of ordinary space. One
scene, in particular, recalls the many Weimar films including Pabsts Die
Bchse der Pandora, which used the motif of the staircase to suggest a dis-
ruptive intensity and feeling of foreboding.35 It is night and Rosalie, Jacquess
girlfriend, has rushed back from the bal musette to warn her father, pre
Schlamp, that she believes Jacques is getting himself into trouble. There is a
high-angle shot of pre Schlamp walking up the shadowy stairway to the
apartment where Jacquess brother and mother live. Instead of a communal
space of clearly delineated spatial codes of intimacy, there is now a heightened
sense of disequilibrium caused by the decision to position the camera at a dis-
torted angle to the regular contours of the staircase and the low level of light-
ing. Pre Schlamp is drunk and this adds to the disorientation. When Jacquess
family opens the door, his mother gasps his name and there is a sudden cut to
an intensely lit close-up of the troubled criminal on the street.
The representation of dark Paris in several migr films reveals the same de-
gree of textual and narrative instability that can be found in various other
migrs depictions of the City of Light. Films like Coeur de lilas and Dans
les rues worked within popular realist traditions of representing the city by
relaying an attentive sense of the marginal world of the working class Parisian
quartier. They thus participated in a depiction of the urban commonplace that
had its historical antecedents in French city representations of the nineteenth
century. But they did more than that; these dark Paris films by the German
migrs also showed an interest in the visual codes of expressive shadow by
128 City of Darkness, City of Light
foregrounding the ways in which film form can manifest feelings of danger,
entrapment, or unease. At certain moments these shadows fractured a visual
continuum of depicting life as it is by drawing attention to the processes of
film technique or narration. In so doing, they helped to unsettle the debate in
French film culture about how to counteract the prestigious and economically
powerful examples of the German and Hollywood film industries by depict-
ing the city of Paris in a distinctively French way. Somewhat ironically, it was
by largely working within pre-existing traditions of Parisian cultural represen-
tation that the migrs were able to participate in the development of the po-
etic realist cinema that was to hold so much sway in critical (and export) terms
in the latter part of the decade. Dans les rues and Coeur de lilas were po-
etic, as well as simply realist exactly because of the central contribution of
non-French personnel who delivered a distinctive congruence between aes-
thetic effect and social commentary. Crucial to these depictions of social life in
the city of darkness were the intersecting worlds of crime and entertain-
ment. Unlike the case of the dark and dangerous streets of cinematic Berlin,
which connoted a contemporary unease with the modern city, Parisian cine-
matic crime often became fused with a safer and less confrontational perspec-
tive which looked back at past imaginings of the city. One of the ways this per-
spective worked was by frequently inter-relating the depiction of criminality
in French city films of the 1930s with aspects of popular community pleasure.
If we therefore look once more at key dark migr texts such as Coeur de
lilas and Dans les rues in relation to these notions, we can see again how the
migrs produced something distinctive by, at the same, fitting in.
To uncover the genealogy of the conflation of crime and entertainment in
cinematic representations of the French capital in the 1930s, we need to return
to nineteenth century discourses of the city which depicted the Parisian
quartier as marginal. As Donald Reid argues, in his introduction to Jacques
Rancires The Nights of Labour (1989, xxiii), nineteenth century knowledge of
the Parisian working class was always mediated in conversation and con-
frontation with an apparent bourgeois other. The identifications and repre-
sentations that resulted, in turn, became the sites of ceaseless rounds of exclu-
sion, inclusion, and differentiation that periodically produced confident
assertions about the proletariat, the people. The world of the people thus be-
came the subject of a series of mediated cultural representations which ranged
from Aristide Bruants cabaret songs to the poeticised urban tourism of Francis
Carco. Carcos own interest in the quartier was based on the specific allure of
the dark streets, the small tobacconists, the cold, the fine rain on the roofs, the
bars, the chance meetings, and in the bedrooms, an air of abandoned distress
which shook [him] to [his] core ( in Chevalier, 1980, 187). His words suggest,
as did Brassas photographs, that the otherness of the city relied on a literal
City of Darkness 129
and imaginative transposition of values. The city literally turned from day-
light to darkness and this meant that, figuratively speaking, the social codes
of nocturnal life [could] contrast with those of ordinary bourgeois society
(Warehime 1996,103). The appeal of the correspondence between crime and
entertainment in popular films depiction of the quartier can therefore, on the
one hand, be explained by the socially privileged view of the allure of the city
at night for the bourgeois spectator. On the other hand, however, it is impor-
tant to recognise the role that popular entertainment itself played in mediating
the dangers and pleasures of the world of the quartier to the film audience. As
Vincendeau has pointed out in her discussion of the tradition of the chanson
raliste directly incorporated into both Coeur de lilas and Dans les rues
singers such as Frhel did more than just sing about the world of prostitution
and petty thieves. They also came from that world in real life, and because of
this and the visible record of that life on the appearance of their bodies, they
sang with the testimony of authenticity (1987, 124).36 French film of the
1930s, by incorporating self-referential forms of Parisian entertainment into its
narratives, therefore described a new collusion between on-screen urban vi-
sual space and urban representational mythologies previously contained in lit-
erature, song, and music. In one sense, this was a progressive accumulation of
motifs of meaning but it was also, in a very real sense, a pleasurable recaptur-
ing of a version of the city already long gone. What is more, the representa-
tional mythologies often contained in Parisian song and music, were them-
selves, as Vincendeau (112) also points out, describing a French capital on the
point of transition.
The space of the caf was central to the construction of the popular commu-
nity of the quartier. In a key sequence in Dans les rues, it is used in conjunction
with the mediating element of Parisian song to delineate both the growing af-
fection between the two romantic leads of the narrative and a sense of commu-
nal interaction. Andrjews set design is meticulous right down to the details
of the posters and furniture but yet again the mise-en-scne also self-
consciously foregrounds the process of visual narration to suggest a secondary
level of mediation: that of the migr with the established tropes of Parisian
representation. The sequence begins with a tightly framed shot of Rosalie. Her
face is boldly lit. As the camera slowly pulls away, the viewer realises that this
image is actually only a reflection. The real Rosalie seems to emerge from the
mirror as she is pictured at a bar table between Jacques to her left and a sleep-
ing boy to her right. Jacques is carefully lit by Rudolph Mat so that the
left-hand side of his face is in shadow. The edges of his side of the image blur
into an atmospheric darkness; just the contours of his hand and the glass that it
holds are illuminated. The camera begins to track in again on the face of
Rosalie at which point a pianola starts up and, off-screen, a bar lady begins to
130 City of Darkness, City of Light
sing a chanson raliste about two lovers and the cinema. This self-referentiality
recalls the sequence previously described involving the layered conjugation of
the street, the male and female locals of the quartier and a cinema poster adver-
tising a Paris crime film. The shot gradually ends with a second close-up of the
girl. There is then a cut to a new perspective on the play between reflection and
reality. The real Rosalie is now framed at an angle on the left-hand edge of
the shot, whilst to her right, we see her reflection in the mirror and the edges of
the figure of Jacques. The rest of the caf is slowly assembled into this interac-
tion between visual space and song as the camera starts to track rightwards, as
if through the mirror, to include other figures in its circular motion. We pass an
elderly bearded man at a table and another seated figure at the bar before ulti-
mately stopping in front of the singer who is behind the counter knitting and
singing. The sombreness in her voice is matched by the heaviness of Mats
dark, low-key lighting. Eventually, the camera begins to track back to Rosalie
and Jacques. There is an obvious correlation between them while the music is
underscored by the way the camera now bypasses the other figures and moves
in a direct sideways, rather than circular, fashion back to the seated couple. The
song finally fades as the couple dissolves into the darkness of the shadows in
an embrace.
The introduction to the space of the hotel in Coeur de lilas similarly sets up a
certain visual detachment before integrating the decor of the social setting
with the action of its inhabitants. After the introductory song by Frhel, the
camera comes to a halt at the exterior of the local hotel. Inside, a petit-bour-
geois businessman is audibly remonstrating with the owners about his bill off-
screen. His provincial accent marks his difference as an outsider. The camera is
initially interested in setting the scene from a slightly detached vantage point.
The drama in the ground floor caf is viewed from the landing above in a
wide-angle shot through the banisters of a staircase. This emphasises the di-
mensions of the social milieu at the expense of depicting any one individual
protagonist. The camera descends to ground level following the steps of one of
the female prostitutes who evidently works in the hotel. The man, dressed in a
formal suit and straw boater, is obviously out of place in this locale. The point
of the episode is to set up the social authority of Martousse, the local gang
leader, who physically ejects him onto the street. Martousse is differentiated
from the psychologically disturbed criminal loners seen in Berlin films such as
M. He is introduced in a particular way which enables him to be seen as both
an emblematic member of the class-based community and a distinctively char-
ismatic and separate figure. This trait which must serve as the defining charac-
teristic of the French, rather than German, cinematic criminal, is later carried
over in the representation of entertainment at the local bal musette. We see in a
City of Darkness 131
leftwards tracking shot a procession of local faces, both seated and standing,
on a level picture plane at an angle to the off-screen argument. The shot comes
to a halt with the image of a louche apache slouched in a corner. Martousse is
differentiated on two counts. Firstly, in spatial terms, he is separated from the
line of figures by the fact that he is seated behind the table which occupies the
same plane as the group. He is also neatly framed by the corners of the seating.
Secondly, his costume connotes glamourous difference. Throughout the film
there is steady attention paid to the hat that Martousse wears. He tilts it down
to affect a dandyish insouciance when a policeman stops him from running to
the cellar during the raid and he later tilts it up to allow a particularly menac-
ing lighting effect to fall over his facial features. This sartorial attention, which
extends to the distinctive white scarf used again in key lit sequences for dra-
matic purpose works in relation to the prim propriety of the misplaced
boater.37
Kurt Courants distinctive, finely graded lighting maximises the potential
of the inter-relationship between Martousse and his milieu. This can be seen in
132 City of Darkness, City of Light
two key instances, each of which signify a different aspect of Gabins powerful
dramatic persona. Firstly, there is the scene when Lilas has come down to the
caf. She wants to be alone but Martousse comes over to her table. There is a
disturbing low-angled two-shot with a fully lit Lilas to the left of the frame
looking intently toward Martousse who is gripping her hand. His body is
turned at such an angle that his face is caught in almost total shadow except for
the marked outline of the edges of his facial features. Lucot tells Martousse to
let the girl go, which he does eventually. Martousse begins to walk away from
Lilas and as he moves forward, the camera tracks back so that the figure of
Gabin is kept in the centre of the frame. The figure of Lilas begins to dissolve
into a background blur but Martousse is kept in the foreground of the image
and he passes through a dense pool of shadow which momentarily washes
over his face. It is as if the room has become the personification of his state of
mind. By the time he emerges from this pool, Lucot has entered the frame and
the two square up to face each other. Martousse now occupies the left side of
the image and his menacing and tensed face is fully and boldly lit by a new
light source. In the second moment, belonging to the end of the quartier se-
quence when he is on the run from the police, the figure of Martousse becomes
a roguish denizen of the underworld whose guile is quite charming. He is
chased by the police across the rooftops above the street. This time he strives to
remain in the shadows but his body is constantly caught between the bound-
aries of light and darkness. When he is caught he returns to ground level and
the bright full lighting of the bal de musette where the music of his previously
performed number is still playing. A policeman has his arm on Martousses
shoulder as they walk through the room. With one swift glance, Martousse
comically effects the removal of the hand and in so doing, he doffs his hat one
last time to return his face to a zone of darkness more befitting of a local apache.
From the moment that Lucot penetrates the world of the street, Coeur de
lilas begins to elaborate on the pattern of disguise and transgression set up by
the police officers appropriation of the social codes of the milieu. The figure of
Lucot is employed to further the narrative of detection but also, because of his
disguise and the mobility this allows, he can be perceived as colluding with the
degree of social voyeurism that the mise-en-scne itself appears to perpetuate.
Thus, although Lucot does break the law, his real transgression is not just a
matter of professional misconduct. It is a departure from a stable class identity
which is perilously complicated when the object of his pursuit also becomes a
figure of desire. This tension may appear to conform to the pattern of the con-
ventional Weimar street film such as Asphalt, but it is also rendered equivocal
by two factors: the unsettling appeal of the character of Martousse and the am-
bivalent status of Lilas in the film. Martousse is so troubling to the convolutions
of the detective narrative because he simply represents an allure that Lucot, as a
City of Darkness 133
bourgeois in disguise, cannot muster. The Paris that Lucot, and via him, the
spectator has penetrated is not only represented as a dangerous world of illicit
criminality; it is also something that is portrayed as subversively attractive.
This instability is foregrounded by the frequent play of light and darkness on
both the surfaces of the quartier the pavement, the alleyway, or rooftop and
the actual body of its principal agent. It is furthered by the differences signified
by the modes of performance of the two male stars. Gabins success as
Martousse stems from the degree of Parisian proletarian authenticity he is able
to deliver. Marcel Carn had noted, in relation to Gabins performance style of
this period, that he showed a marked taste for a people on the margins and a
use of slang dialect embellished with picturesque images. Like all Parisian kids
he [liked] to give himself an air of freedom, of permanent revolt.38 The sugges-
tion here is that Gabin (unlike Luguet playing Lucot playing an unemployed
mechanic) was the person he was playing. As Vincendeau has convincingly ar-
gued the proletarian register in which Gabin [operated], defined by his voice,
his gestures, his clothes, and the decors in which he [moved], [designated] him
as more authentic than a bourgeois character, since French proletarian culture
distinguishes itself from bourgeois culture (...) by its desire to get at the sub-
stance of things rather than concentrate on appearances (1993, 28).
Central also to the criminal conception of the Parisian quartier was the fig-
ure of the female prostitute. Although absent in Dans les rues, she lies, as the
title of the film suggests, at the heart of Coeur de lilas. Crucially, the prosti-
tute is represented twice: through Lilas and then through her older counter-
part, La Douleur. Whilst Marcelle Rome is almost silent throughout the film,
Frhel is distinguished by her earthy physicality and voice. The two embody
separate performance traditions and, in turn, separate relationships to the
films conceptions of Parisian space. As already noted, Lilas occupies an am-
biguous place regarding the central concerns of the narrative. On the one
hand, as the chief murder suspect, she is the focus of the investigation of the
male protagonist. This is exemplified by the way she is fixed by the gaze of
Lucot in her introduction. But on the other hand, she relays a sense of indeter-
minate fragility which comes across not only in her positioning within the
frame of the image but also in how these images relate to the surrounding
world of masculine subordination. Lilas thus comes to represent a particular
aspect of the social entrapment that the film constantly alludes to. Just as the
setting of Lilas is pictured as separate from the heart of Paris, so the person of
Lilas is pictured as separate from the conviviality and communality of the
quartier. She is frequently shown upstairs, spatially separated from the rest of
the community. When she is downstairs, she is normally shown in one-shots.
Her eyes are usually fixed off-screen at some unspecified object of attention
and the stillness of her body language not only contrasts with the fluidity of
134 City of Darkness, City of Light
many of the central male characters but it also suggests an internalised sense of
containment and isolation. What is more, there are brief moments when an as-
pect of her subjectivity is allowed to highlight the difficulty of the space that
she occupies socially. When the group get ready to playfully re-enact the police
investigation in the caf, the camera looks up to the banister and landing. This
shot is from no ones point of view, it simply shows Lilas emerging from the
gloom upstairs. We then cut to a shot from Lilass point of view. The group be-
low is shown through the banister. The film intercuts between this image and a
disturbing medium close-up of a nervous looking Lilas. A medium close-up
pan shows the main figures laughing downstairs to further emphasise Lilass
separation. Martousse stops laughing, aware of being looked at, and his eyes
turn left. We cut to Lilass reaction and then back to the group staring upwards.
Finally, Litvak cuts to the full-length point of view shot of Lilas standing at the
top of the stairs. The fact that this return of the gaze has been so delayed only
reinforces its intensity.
This tenuous inter-relation between a momentary feminine subjectivity
and the objectification of the powerful male look is absent in the depiction of
the older prostitute, La Douleur. As the emblematic title of the opening song
Dans la rue suggests, her identity is based on an almost physical embodiment
of a certain kind of Parisian-ness which relies on the now recognisable alliance
between nighttime crime and entertainment. The fact that she is older and
bulkier gives her a subtle kind of physical liberty in relation to the space of the
quartier. She is pictured sitting and joking with the other apaches and her body
is linked to a bawdiness and vulgarity which can only come with the accumu-
lation of lifes experiences. In the words of Andr Maug: she manages to se-
duce you with her good-natured brusqueness and the populist verve that
doesnt flinch from the overtly obscene gesture; the direct brilliance of her
make-up laden eyes and the magnificent strength of her low-pitched voice
which rumbles and rolls like a storm holds you in her sway.39 What is more,
Frhels experience denotes a secondary layer of pastness to further under-
score the current of nostalgic imagining. Frhels relationship to the mythical
milieu of the Parisian quartier was not only given a loaded degree of authentic-
ity because of her own origins, but through the chronology of her career she
would have provided an built-in reflexive sense of the past for the French
audience of the 1930s. As Vincendeau points out, Frhel had two careers. Fol-
lowing an initial spell of stardom in the Parisian music hall and a tumultuous
series of personal tragedies, including a broken romance with Maurice Cheva-
lier, she left France. Upon her return prematurely aged, fat and sick, she be-
gan the second phase of her popularity. Thus her life, like most of her songs
[which] displayed dialectics of joy and misery, beauty and destitution (...) had
a similar built-in structure of nostalgia (1987, 117). This structure is signaled
City of Darkness 135
The camera alights on the immobile, seated Lilas and Lucot and eavesdrops on
their conversation until, on the cue of the girls distracted gaze rightwards, it
finishes its rotation across almost the entire space of the room to focus on the
spectacularly portrayal of Martousse. Thanks to Courants sophisticated cine-
matography, his body is literally split into zones of darkness and light with his
face being the clear battleground between these two elements. In a fit of tem-
per, he flings a glass to the floor and we see Martousse emerge from behind the
edges of the bar wall as if hes treading onto his own territorial stage. Two
shadowy criminal types glance at him admiringly in the background. Mar-
tousse thus combines a mastery of the rooms dimensions and a mastery of the
communitys gaze. He briefly comes to a halt, standing next to his burly male
companion before breaking through the shadows to stroll across the room. His
body is simultaneously integrated and separated from the procession of danc-
ing figures. He belongs spatially to the flow since he occupies an intermediary
plane between two lines of dancers who move behind and in front of him but,
significantly, he is moving against the crowd in the opposite direction. He
briefly comes to a halt again to totally occupy the centre of the frame. His face
is now fully lit by a new and brighter source of light. Martousses relationship
to the frame alters and he is highlighted in near close-up. After La Douleurs
singing retort to his performance, Martousse returns to the couple to confront
them. He tells Lucot to leave. The detective stands up and there is a cut to a
dramatically lit medium close-up of Martousse. Martousse is motionless
whilst a posse of men moves in behind him to crowd the frame. In the return
shot, Lucot, as in the caf, is isolated within an empty space. The pair of shots is
repeated but this time when Lucot glances off-screen we cut to an extraordi-
nary close-up pan of a sea of menacingly lit local faces, all denizens of the
world to which Lucot is now insistently made to feel that hes an interloper. It
is as if he has been defeated twice: firstly by the charisma of performance and
then by the congregation of now darkened faces from the underworld that the
performance has unleashed.
Coeur de lilas and Dans les rues both clearly demonstrate the powerful
allure of a particularly Parisian mode of integrating crime and entertainment
with the depiction of the values of the popular street community. As Rifkin has
argued though in his observations on the multi-layered depiction of the
French capital in Dtective, Parisian crime was also a relationship of social
classes, strata, and sexes (1993, 123). To this extent, one also needs to consider
the other key site of the period where urban danger and pleasure intersected:
the murky ambience of the Parisian nightclub. By looking at Kurt Bernhardts
migr film Carrefour interestingly enough originally entitled LHomme
de la nuit it is possible to see how the topography of the criminal quartier co-
incided with the more luxurious glamour of the Montmartre nighttime venue.
City of Darkness 137
8. Michle (Suzy Prim, left) and Lucien (Jules Berry, right) in Carrefour (BFI)
The introductory scene to Michles venue indicates how the nightclub was a
place of cosmopolitan allure in Parisian cinematic representations of the
1930s. Here the wealthy, generally male, bourgeois visitor was entertained in
a lavish, often feminised space of performance and illicit temptation. Temp-
tation was identified with prostitution as the names of the establishments
run by Franoise Rosay in Jenny Chez Jenny or Michle Morgan in
LEntraneuse La Dame de Coeur suggest. The venues were often signaled
as feminised in two ways. Firstly, they were usually contrasted with a formal,
heavily masculinised commercial or residential space. In LEntraneuse, for
example, the narrative begins with an all-male business dinner. We move
from a dreary, elderly speaker to a shot of the butler opening a window. In a
style similar to that of La Vie Parisienne, when we glide through the cus-
toms window to the splendour of spectacular Paris, the camera lunges into
the new space of the street and the lights of the club beyond. In the case of
Carrefour, the first view of the Michle nightclub is preceded by a tightly
framed two-shot of the interior of a taxi carrying the stiff, dinner-suited fig-
ures of de Vetheuil and his assistant through the city. The second cue, before
the camera as per custom moves inside, is the postcard image of Paris at
night with illuminated neon lettering of the nightclub shining in the citys
City of Darkness 139
ers, but this performance of two cultures in Paris is actually curiously much
like the performance of Parisian-ness undertaken by the German migrs.
Both could be said to have staged an aural or visual negotiation between two
specific points of reference. This ambiguity takes us back to the cultural repre-
sentations of the city in Siodmaks La Vie parisienne where Paris was defined
as both uniquely French, and as belonging to the world. The second way in
which the alterity of the music works in the film lies clearly in the context of the
direction of international cinematic culture. The perhaps crude association be-
tween jazz and the nighttimes dangerous desire in Bernhardts French thriller
still nicely anticipates the American noir city that he was to portray upon his
arrival in the United States and Hollywood.
Having said this, however, the representation of the nightclub in Carre-
four does works suggestively within parameters set by other French films of
the period, and this is particularly noticeable in the inter-relationship between
space and performance. When we see Michle lead the two men to their seats it
is done through a complexly staged tracking shot which simultaneously de-
picts the details of the social milieu and presents the partnership between de
Vetheuil and his former mistress. At the moment that Charles Vanel says he
wants to see Suzy Prim alone, their figures almost fill the frame, momentarily
erasing the space of the heightened mise-en-scne. It is almost as if they are
speaking exclusively for the benefit of the spectator which is, of course, what
they are doing in their simultaneous roles as renowned stars of Parisian film
and theatre. This partnering of two character types is typical of the film. It is as
evident in the repartee between Prim and Jules Berry who were married to
each other at the time as it is in the contrast between the fixity and sobriety of
Vanel and the fluid, constantly mobile, gestural performance of Berry. Without
any editing, the couple move back into the middle distance of this visually in-
toxicating spectacle and the men sit down. Elsaessers argument that the dif-
ference between an actors cinema such as prevailed in France and the German
cinema of mise-en-scne and space may well have been the biggest obstacle to
critical success for the migrs films (1984, 283), does not really appear to be
true in the case of Carrefour. Throughout the film, the collusion between the
known actorly styles of the lead performers and an aspect of the mise-en-scne,
be it stronger lighting, the decor or the space, works to produce distinctive
meanings. As was the case of Gabin in Coeur de lilas, Vanel seems to literally
emerge from expressive pools of shadow during key dramatic moments. The
tension produced by the German characteristic use of psychologically moti-
vated lighting works with the particular narratives focus on unreliable iden-
tity as it destabilises the spectators own perception of the ordinary figure of
Vanels taciturn but reliable persona. In the previously mentioned 1933 inter-
view, Bernhardt had referred to the commonly perceived difference in perfor-
City of Darkness 141
mance styles between French and German film actors. German actors put
more research into psychological motivation but they tend to be heavier and
slower [than the French], he remarked. French actors are lighter, less deep
but, at the same time, they have a greater degree of naturalness. The ideal
would be halfway between one and the other.45 One way of looking at Carre-
four, therefore, is to suggest that this ideal was achieved in terms of viewing
the film itself as a crossroads a meeting between the brio of French perfor-
mance and the narrative possibilities of Germanic visual style.
Just as La Vie Parisienne, La Crise est finie and Mauvaise graine partly
functioned as migr texts by including the depiction of travel across Paris,
Coeur de lilas, Dans les rues and Carrefour similarly made sense of the
city by a set of journeys. In so doing, they produced new perspectives on the
centrality of the quartier and the worlds of crime and entertainment to the rep-
resentation of the French capital as a site of darkness. They also suggested, in a
number of different ways, that one must relate these narrative journeys to
broader textual and historical questions about the travelling inter-relationship
between the past and the present in French cinematic representation of the
1930s.
It is clear that a complex layering of nostalgia has to be acknowledged in re-
lation to the portrayal of Paris in the decades cinematic output. This is cer-
tainly true in the way that a sense of the past informs the links between urban
crime and entertainment in the films I have already mentioned. As we have
noted, Parisian crime films of the period differed from those found in the dark
and dangerous streets of cinematic Berlin. Instead of connoting a contemporary
unease with the modern city, they often became infused with a safer and less
confrontational perspective that looked back at past imaginings of the city. By
the 1930s, for instance, the pre-First World War figure of the Parisian apache
was already being widely mythologised within French cultural discourse. We
can see migr examples of this in the song On ne voit a qu Paris in
Siodmaks La Crise est finie and in Litvak and Courants use of the figure of
Martousse and the milieu of the criminal quartier in Coeur de lilas. Here,
shadow was linked to notions of the past in a complex manner. In one sense,
darkness could be simply read as all that signified a lack of progress the old
Paris of densely woven, badly lit streets that was not considered spectacle. But
we may also find contained in this idea an element of social criticism or re-
proach which suggests that the unnecessary consequence of urban modernity
142 City of Darkness, City of Light
was the suffering and impoverishment of those excluded those who re-
mained in the shadows. The narrative movement away from the mythologised
darkness of this environment in Coeur de lilas provides one specific example
of this particular journeying between past and present. If we examine this key
sequence closely, it becomes apparent that a different, more contemporary
Paris also emerges in the light of day. Furthermore we can see, once again, how
the migrs sophisticated handling of light helped, both in a technical and
aesthetic sense, to bring a past prowess in picturing Berlin forward to the pres-
ent of picturing Paris.
The fact that the quartier in Coeur de lilas is seen as a world apart from the
modern everyday city is developed, first of all, by the narrative transition back
to the use of Parisian location footage. This happens soon after Lucot and Lilas
leave the intimacy and complex spatial design of Pimenoffs set, following the
police raid. The couple are pictured in a long-shot of a darkened and deserted
rainy street which recalls the potent atmospherics of the empty city at night in
La Chienne. The intense light from a streetlight on a corner breaks up the
blackness. The two fugitives hail a bus and ask to be taken to the end of the
line. The idea of the end of the line is a practical reality enabling the couple to
go backwards and forwards along the route of the bus until dawn, but it also
suggests a metaphorical dimension there is nowhere else to go. The height-
ened atmosphere in this scene is derived partly from an almost surreal juxta-
position between the excessive noise and commotion of the raid and the qui-
etude and isolation of this section of the city. It is also produced by Courant
and Litvaks delicately staged inter-relationship between space, light and the
object of the cameras attention. At one point, the couple are framed in a me-
dium close-up. Lucot has his arm around Lilas who is again gazing off-screen.
As she speaks, the city passes by behind them in the bus window. The contrast
between this flow of framed motion (akin to the progression of a reel of film)
and their stillness works not so much to separate the couple from the city.
Rather, instead, the city also passes through them in the form of light which
illuminates their features.
The limpidity of this extraordinary sequence is accented by the preponder-
ance of soft dissolves. After a succession of close-up images of an increasingly
over-stuffed breast pocket of bus tickets, there is a dissolve to a view of the city
during daytime taken from inside the bus as it turns a street corner. Again, the
city comes inside the bus. At the moment the bus swings around the corner,
the camera swings rightwards into the carriage and we see the conductor
make his way down to the sleeping couple. Paris is pictured full of life in day-
light. As the bus pulls away and the passengers spill into the crowded public
space of Les Halles, the screen fills up with traffic and shouting street vendors.
The sense of a shift to a new and more immediate social reality is effected. It is
City of Darkness 143
as if the bus has been a temporal and spatial border-zone between the quartier
and the city centre. The progression from night to day underlines the fact that
the quartier is only seen in the film as a nighttime space but the destination of
the bus is also significant. Les Halles is itself a blurred location, caught be-
tween night and day because of its nature as a late night as well as early morn-
ing market with its own set of cultural mythologies.46
The quartiers version of urban representation relied on the inter-related
components of song and music, costume, and the careful choreography of per-
formance and set design, but Paris is now pictured here by means of a succes-
sion of documentary style shots of present-day social reality. The density of au-
ditory and visual signifiers is signaled as distinct from the quartier by the
integration of Lilass individual reaction to this new version of city life. It is as
if we are now being invited to view the city through her eyes. The close-up of
her feet on the pavement which dissolves to a close-up of her eyes flashing
rightwards and leftwards invites a reading based on her momentary subjectiv-
ity. This is sustained by a succession of tightly framed shots which presents her
sense of her own self in this stimulating landscape. We cut from a shot of
bunches of flowers to Lilas looking mutely off-screen to the right. Her gaze
turns down to the floor and her head appears to bow. The blaring interruption
of the sound of a car horn breaks this interiority and the camera cuts to another
close-up of Lilass body. This time she appears to remove a handkerchief from
the belt around her waist. We then cut to a shot of Lilas fervently sniffing the
flowers. Litvak has briefly shown the newness and sensory impact of the heart
of the city on one individual through a cinematic monitoring of optical, audi-
tory and orafactory-related responses. The sense of release from the past class
and gender restraints of the fortifications is furthered by Lilass makeover at the
modern boutique. When she exits the shop onto the Parisian street she de-
clares: Call me madame now! The showroom dummy, foregrounded at the
end of the previous shot, remains in frame throughout the slow dissolve and
only disappears at the moment when Lilas steps out the door onto the pave-
ment. This neatly visualises the transition between aspiration and realisation
regarding a different model of urban femininity. Lilass new look removes her
from the old marginal codes of the quartier and provides her with a tentative
foothold in the social currency of the present-day urban female consumer.
If the modern city is a place of liberation for Lilas, her past nevertheless co-
mes back to haunt and imprison her. The past literally catches up with the
present with the near simultaneous arrival of Martousse and Lucots police su-
perior at the guingette where she is hiding with Lucot. The revelation of Lucots
deception and the threat of entrapment prompt Lilas to attempt an escape. We
see her running in a long shot away from the camera towards the direction of
an overhead railway bridge, across which a train is moving. At this point, the
144 City of Darkness, City of Light
culture. The delayed effects of the Great Depression had hit France hard and
urban unemployment soared amidst the backdrop of a succession of short-
lived governments. Since the end of the First World War, national revenue per
capita had grown by an average of five per cent. But in the 1930s, this figure fell
twice as rapidly as it had once risen (Weber 1995, 42). The material nature of
the constructed environment of Paris was emblematic of the overall stasis in
society. In the French capital, building industry contracts, even as late as 1938,
were down by 40 per cent from their level a decade earlier (Weber 1995, 48).
Added to all this was an important demographic shift between the popula-
tions of the countrys urban and rural areas. With the urban population now
greater than the rural one, the role of Paris, as the depository of the nations
central mythologies, arguably became intensified.
What still remains under-recognised regarding French cinematic produc-
tion during this period, however, is the sheer material and psychological im-
pact that the First World War had on France. One of the longest legacies of its
devastation was the introduction of a deeply felt need for recuperation com-
bined with a longing for the reassurances of past notions of national belong-
ing. The impact was clearly enormous not least of all because of the scale of
the nations suffering. Most of the men killed would have actually seen their
lives come to fruition in the 1930s and everyone was surrounded by surviving
veterans they comprised almost fifty per cent of the male population (Weber
1995, 12). The war remainned a constant topic in political and cultural dis-
course in the 1930s. Many native French film personnel such as Charles Vanel
had actually fought in the trenches. Others had lost their lives and thus de-
prived the post-war film industry of their talents. Eugne Dabit was but one of
the many close to the film world in the 1930s who laid claim to the powerful ef-
fects of memory in relation to his war experiences. He wrote in his diary that
almost every night since my demobilisation, images of the front came back to
haunt me, and a still worse nightmare I dreamed that hostilities were start-
ing again (in Weber, 12).
How did the war affect the migrs representation of Paris in the French
cinema of the period? Did it play a similar role as with native personnel, in that
it contributed to the sense of creating a safe distance from the problems of the
present? For many of these migrs, the impact of the First World War helped
shape both the welcomes they received and the hostilities they experienced.
On the one hand, their skills and training served a compensatory purpose,
making up for perceived native weaknesses due to war-related economic un-
der-development. On the other hand, there were constant reminders of an en-
emy from the past. For some, this even forewarned of a potential enemy in the
future. In terms of the relationship between memory and the portrayal of Paris
as the city of darkness we can discern two trends. One was largely concerned
City of Darkness 147
with uncovering the dark city and still representing it as it was once thought to
be. This is largely the mode of Dans les rues and Coeur de lilas although, as
we have also seen, there were other signs of a complex interchange between
notions of the urban past and the present. The second trend was that the wars
past literally caught up with the present so that the battleground was trans-
ferred to the individual mind. Here, the past literally was dark because it re-
mained unknown. This is the case in Carrefour.
It has not been sufficiently recognised that Bernhardts film was actually
based on a real-life war-time incident. According to an interview with Carre-
fours scriptwriter, Hans Kafka, the film was inspired by the Bruneri-Canella
case which had shocked Italian society in the 1920s. At the end of the First
World War, two physically similar Italian soldiers had disappeared in Macedo-
nia a Paduan professor (Bruneri) and a wanted Roman street criminal (Ca-
nella). A derelict, unidentified man was found and claimed respectively by
Bruneris widow and the crooks father. Both cities campaigned for the iden-
tity of their own man until Canellas old fingerprints were accidentally dis-
covered by the police in Rome. The match was made and the case solved; the
amnesiac had indeed had a criminal past. Despite all of this however, Bruneris
widow refused to accept the verdict and after Canella was released from
prison he eventually went on to live as Bruneri with his wife in Padua.
Hans Kafka, perhaps because of his German cultural heritage, was fascinated
by this Doppelgnger narrative and went to visit Bruneri while he was pre-
paring the script for Carrefour. He likened it to other examples in Germany
and France. What fascinated him, was how an individual is impregnated by
his milieu.47 Kafkas comments remain forceful, not least of all because of the
subtle awareness of his own situation as a German migr still working in a
largely alien environment and having to contribute to the production of an os-
tensibly French film.
In Carrefour, the mingling of past and present is achieved through the
central figure of Vetheuil. When the war veteran first appears at Michles
nightclub, it is clear that he is not so much entering a novel world of danger
and cosmopolitan allure, but returning to his past to the world he came from.
It is not surprising that this mingling of past and present takes place in Mont-
martre. As we have seen, much Parisian music hall entertainment that took
place in this section of Paris explicitly projected an interpretation of past plea-
sure for a contemporary audience. Vetheuil is, in one sense, emblematic of the
way Parisian film culture of the period also made use of past city mythologies
by reconstituting them in contemporary cinematic contexts.
If we focus on the conclusion of the cabaret sequence in Carrefour, we can
see how the film draws meaning from a sense of the past that comes back to un-
settle the spectacle of contemporary Parisian pleasure. When de Vetheuil walks
148 City of Darkness, City of Light
through the separating curtain to visit Michle in her living quarters above the
cabaret, he initially enters the transitional, empty space at the foot of a stairway.
Unlike the quartier staircase that integrates the various levels of the community,
this passageway separates the past from the present and the public from the
private. Because of the shots carefully constructed lighting, the spectator is
treated to the shadow of de Vetheuils former self literally catching up with him
on the wall as he mounts the stairs. By the time de Vetheuil enters Michles
room, he has also become Pettier, the Parisian criminal. The worlds of crime
and entertainment are fused yet again. Like Jennys quarters in Jenny (also de-
signed by Jean dEaubonne), Michles room is decorated in a range of lightly
coloured, soft and luxurious fabrics. The zebra skin print on the floor connotes
a different class reading of luxury from the more sensible and discrete fabric
found in de Vetheuils bourgeois mansion. As Michle recalls her romance with
Pettier off-screen, the rooms space is detailed in an extraordinarily rich, slow
circular pan. We pass a large window that reveals the nighttime cityscape. An
illuminated cinema sign breaks up the darkness outside. The camera also fo-
cuses on a prominent photograph from Michles younger days before resting
on a medium long-shot of the couple with de Vetheuil/ Pettier seated on the
sofa and Michle reclined on the floor. Dance music filters in from downstairs
and the camera tracks in as Michle reminiscences about a bistrot they used to
frequent and about living together in an apartment in the emblematic working
class district of Belleville. The sequences powerful emphasis on visuality and
remembering comes to the fore at the moment when this portrait of shared nos-
talgia is punctuated by a fierce close-up of Vanel. Suddenly the dance music is
interrupted by the sound of an interiorised soundtrack of music from Pettiers
past. Or to put it another way, Belleville collides with Montmartre and the dark
Parisian past enters the light Parisian present.
5 Divided City
The critic Georges Champeaux noted that Piges (1939), Robert Siodmaks fi-
nal film made in France before departing for the United States, seemed to be
like a dark Parisian police drama but indeed it was something else. Piges
has neither the cut nor the rhythm of a police film, he stated. What it seems
like is a succession of sketches destined to bring its comical or bizarre charac-
ters to life in front of us. The slowness and, it has to be said, the talent with
which the director Robert Siodmak describes the social milieu of each of his
characters scarcely contributes to strengthening the films illusion.1 Fritz
Langs only film made in France, Liliom, was given similarly contradictory re-
views at the time, no doubt in part because halfway through the film, the epon-
ymous lead, a Parisian mauvais garon played by Charles Boyer, leaves the Pari-
sian zone for a fantastic journey to heaven. Many of Lilioms critics also
pointed out the national hybridity of the film, which was based on a play by
the Hungarian playwright Frederic Molnar, produced by the renowned U.F.A.
producer Erich Pommer, and directed by Germanys most famous director,
Fritz Lang. To the right-wing cultural press, for example, Liliom was a prime
example of the dangers of having a multi-cultural film culture in France. The
virulently anti-Semitic Franois Vinneuil saw this French-Jewish-Hungarian
collaboration as a return to that bizarre and boring cinematic country pro-
duced by U.F.A.s French-German dramas [which was] a no mans land, a Ba-
bel emptied of all character lying a lot closer to the Spre than to the Seine.2
Piges and Liliom are further examples of how different groups of migrs
portrayed the French capital. In part, they consolidate the ideas discussed in
the preceding chapters. Yet at the same time, they also express a more frag-
mented notion of the conventions of Parisian representation, and in this sense,
they are both divided on a textual and representational level. To understand
this sense of division we should examine the films in relation to three overlap-
ping contexts. Firstly, we need to consider the way the two productions actu-
ally frame the period in question. Fritz Langs Liliom follows along the lines of
the work produced by the migrs who came to Paris for economically or tech-
nically related reasons in the 1930s and in this sense, Liliom may be seen as a
snapshot of the opening wave of the primarily politically minded emigration of
Berlin film personnel after the Nazi consolidation of power in 1933. It was the
first film produced by the French subsidiary of the American Fox Film Corpo-
ration headed by fellow migr Erich Pommer, former production chief at
150 City of Darkness, City of Light
U.F.A. in Berlin. Robert Siodmaks Piges, on the other hand, was completed
just before his departure for Hollywood and did not even receive a Parisian re-
lease until December 1939, by which time Siodmak was already in the United
States. In one sense, it was really a passport film with one eye firmly on the fu-
ture and one on the present.3 If we look at the production histories of the two
films, we can begin to redefine the work of the migrs in terms of how these
features relate to the apparent division between the idea of Paris as the centre of
domestic film production and the idea of Paris as the place of temporary exile.
Secondly, we need to return to the issues of performance and identity. Both
films starred lead actors with international careers who were, at the same time,
closely connected in the public sphere to specific notions of Frenchness and Pa-
risian culture. Both Maurice Chevalier and Charles Boyer were used in these
two features because of their relationships to the specific question of the repre-
sentation of Paris. Their own divided status informs an understanding of the
way the French capital was portrayed. A third frame of reference is based on
these two points. Here I would like to address the question of travel and return
again to the notion of journeying, which has been a principal metaphor for this
book. How does the evident mobility in the films narratives relate to the repre-
sentation of place and location? In other words, if one is to characterise the
Paris of Piges and Liliom as divided, in what ways was the city itself split,
and how was this division informed by the matter of emigration?
When Josef Goebbels called for a boycott of all Jewish businesses, soon after
Adolf Hitler became Chancellor on 30 January 1933, it became clear that the
Nazis were targeting the widespread popularity of the national film industry
for immediate political and ideological reorientation. On March 29, two days
after the Hotel Kaiserhof meeting between Goebbels and a group of film in-
dustry professionals, Fritz Langs most recent German film, Das Testament
der Doctor Mabuse (1933), was formally banned from German cinemas by
the German Board of Film Censors. U.F.A.s board not only fired all Jewish em-
ployees, it further authorised that two films of purely German character be
given immediate production priority over previously scheduled French-
language versions (Hardt 1996, 138). It is ironic then that Liliom, Pommer and
Langs first migr film project in France, notably played up its sense of natio-
nal hybridity to the point where the formal qualities of the films depiction of
Paris were criticised in the French press for being too German. For example,
Jean Laury even commented that the concern of the director might have been
to make a French film, but in fact, Liliom is a German film par excellence.4
According to the legend, repeated not least by Lang himself, Germanys
most celebrated film director fled Berlin on the night train to Paris after being
asked by Goebbels to head a new Nazi film agency in early April 1933. How-
ever, it has recently been ascertained that Langs movements prior to his final
Divided City 151
stay in Paris were more fluid and less dramatic than the scenario hitherto
painted (McGilligan 1997, 173). As an elite member of the German film indus-
try, like his friend Erich Pommer, he was able to make extensive preparations
for his departure from an increasingly anti-Semitic and xenophobic Berlin. He
already knew Paris well from having studied there as an art student in 1913
and 1914. He departed for the French capital in late June 1933, but actually re-
turned to Germany before finally leaving for good on 21 July 1933. Unlike the
case with many of his exiled compatriots who stayed in poorer Paris lodgings
like the Hotel Ansonia, 8 rue de Saigon, Langs luxurious room at the Hotel
George V was proof of his status and economic mobility.5 Curt Riess, in fact,
was to call him an emigrant deluxe (in McGilligan, 191). Pommer had in
early 1933 made detailed financial arrangements in the United States with Sid-
ney Kent, president of the Fox Film Corporation, to set up a film production di-
vision based in Europe. This enabled him to leave Germany for France with
the knowledge that he had an established business to come to. Originally, of
course, Fox Film Europa was to be based in Germany. By August, however, an-
nouncements were made in the French film press that Pommer had estab-
lished a modus operandi which would stimulate French film production by pro-
ducing French- and English-language films in Paris.6 One of the directors he
wished to work with was his compatriot, Fritz Lang.
It is also ironic that Pommer should choose such a determinedly cosmopoli-
tan project for Fox Europas first French venture. Liliom was closely based on
Frederic Molnars successful play which had been performed with Georges
Pitoff at the Comdie des Champs-Elyses in Paris in 1923. Interestingly, the
stage production had been set in the context of the dark tradition of urban rep-
resentation. One critic observed that it was reminiscent of the work of Francis
Carco, while another anonymous writer thought that the mise-en-scne was
heavily influenced by the Berlin cinema with an accumulation of heavy and
clumsy details in the German style.7 Lang had actually seen the Berlin produc-
tion with Hans Albers in the 1920s. An earlier, rather unremarkable, film adap-
tation was produced by Frank Borzage for Fox in 1930 starring Charles Farrel in
the lead role. The national origins of the production crew were heterogeneous:
Langs assistant, Gilbert Mandelik, was a German-Jewish film professional; the
cinematographer was Rudolph Mat (who had completed Dans les rues that
same year); the composer was Franz Waxman (who had arranged the score for
Der blaue Engel and was to work on La Crise est finie and Mauvaise
graine) and the script was co-written by former-U.F.A. employee Robert
Liebmann. Liebmanns Berlin credits included Robert Siodmaks Vorunter-
suchung (1931) and Strme der Leidenschaft (1931). Liliom was nonethe-
less a project specifically designed for Lang. The directors credentials were
heavily signalled in Nino Franks contemporaneous interview where he de-
152 City of Darkness, City of Light
scribed Lang as having a German build combined with the elegance of a Pa-
risian bon viveur (...) in short, a curious mixture on first sight of a man of the
North and a man of the South of German and Latin culture.8
Lang began shooting Liliom in November 1933 at the Studios des
Rservoirs at Joinville and it was released in Paris the following spring. The
films plot concerns the life and death of Liliom (Charles Boyer), a mauvais
garon who lives in the zone on the outskirts of Paris. Liliom works as a hawker
at a local fairground for Mme Moscat (Florelle), the owner of a merry-go-
round. One evening he decides to approach two girls who have been coming
to the fair regularly. He begins a love affair with one of them. Julie (Madeleine
Ozeray) and Liliom set up house with Julies aunt Madame Menoux
(Maximilienne) and they establish a photography business together. Liliom is
often moody and short-tempered at home. Julie becomes pregnant and, be-
cause hes short of money, Liliom plans a robbery with his former criminal co-
hort, Alfred (Pierre Alcover). The plans go awry and in desperation Liliom
kills himself. Liliom is taken to the judicial courts of heaven to watch a film re-
cording of his earthly activities and numerous temper tantrums before being
placed into purgatory. Many years later he is briefly allowed to return to earth
where he meets his daughter. Lilioms tears of regret back in heaven restore the
scales of justice so that he is ultimately absolved of his crime.
Numerous production reports in the French film press took a two-fold in-
terest in the film. Many writers noted the contribution of a particularly Ger-
man aesthetic in the way that Lang depicted life in the French capital. Paul
Rebouxs comments were typical at the time when he wrote about Lilioms
rather dark cinematography and the habitual slowness in the rhythm often
found in German films.9 However, interestingly enough, at the same time as
recognising difference, commentators were also keen to evoke the verisimili-
tude of the productions depiction of Paris. Reporting in Paris-Midi, Claude
Jahni thought that the films atmosphere captured the exact sentiments of an-
guish and melancholy that he felt at a fte foraine de quartier (local fairground).
All that was missing for the illusion to be perfect was the smell of chips. (...)
Fritz Lang has masterfully reconstructed an ambience so French that down to
the finest detail one is left confounded.10
As we saw in Chapter Two, Robert Siodmaks French career was more ex-
tended and uneven than Langs. He actually worked as an migr in France
from 1933 to 1939 without a work permit (Dumont 1981, 122-128), and was un-
doubtedly relieved to discover by chance during the shooting of Piges that he
had not in fact lost his original American nationality. After years of profes-
sional insecurity and anxiety, caused by, among other factors, the sometimes
hostile resentment of his presence in the French film industry, he seized the op-
portunity and moved to the United States. He left Europe on 31 August 1939,
Divided City 153
sailing aboard the French liner, the Champlain, with a copy of Piges packed
in his luggage. He had originally had plans to return briefly to France the fol-
lowing year and complete a proposed project in Holland, but war broke out
the next day on 1 September 1939.
Siodmaks last French film was a heterogeneous one in more than one
sense. To the film historian, it looks backwards and forwards at the same time.
Dumont, for instance, insists that Piges at times returns to the climate of
Siodmaks early U.F.A. films with their fascination for sordid details and their
pitiless lighting, whereas certain harrowing parts (...) already foretell his
American works like The Spiral Staircase (125). Elsaesser even suggests
that the film should really have been made in Hollywood, and by Lubitsch
(...) because it illustrates to perfection the miscognition factor of Austro-
Germans as directors of Hapsburg decadence or Parisian operetta, given the
prominent presence in Piges of both Erich von Stroheim and Maurice Cheva-
lier (1996, 140). These points may be true, but it is also useful to position
Piges within the hitherto relatively ignored historical context of Siodmaks
own French work.
The films narrative and aesthetic framework relies on the motif of detec-
tion to knit together a varied series of sequences and episodes set in Paris. This
particular instance of disparity is in fact indicative of the variety of Siodmaks
entire period of exile in France during which he made films in various genres.
What is more, despite the fact that Piges was seen as a Siodmak film at the
time of its Paris release at the end of 1939, it was also an international pro-
duction in the sense that it was, like so many migr films made in France, a
joint creative venture by film people of various nationalities. The numerous
sets by the Russian migr Georges Wakhvitch not only let everyone know
that this was a prestigious production, they also represented an geographical
scope to the way in which Paris was portrayed. Wakhvitch had already been
working in Paris since 1921. He designed the noirish Montparnasse interiors
for Julien Duviviers version of Simenons La Tte dun homme, as well as the
sets for Pierre Chenals James L. Cain adaptation Le Dernier tournant
which also appeared in 1939. The complex lighting ranged from depicting ex-
tensive scenes of Parisian high life to the nocturnal shadows of city streets and
back rooms. It was organised by Michel Kelber and Ted Pahle who had
worked together on other French productions in the 1930s. Neither were
French natives; Pahle was an American of German origin and Kelber, though
educated in France, was a Russian. Ernest Neuville, one of the screenwriters,
was also a Berliner. He had worked with Siodmak on der Mann der Seinen
Mrder Sucht (1930) under the name Ernst Neubach.
Piges was based on a Norbert Garay stage play, but it had its origins in the
sensational Eugen Weidman affair that had gripped the attention of Parisians
154 City of Darkness, City of Light
9. Adrienne (Marie Da, left) and Fleury (Maurice Chevalier, right) in Piges
(BFI)
There is a chance of not being strictly locked into one kind of film. On the con-
trary, one can touch on the differing rhythms of comedy, drama, adventure
comedy and develop sketches with either happy, sad or humourous ambi-
ences.12 In a later interview, the director went on to argue that Piges was a
psychological film, claiming that he had chosen his cast for reasons of psycho-
logical and physical authenticity. These are clearly the words of an experi-
enced professional who had, by now, formed an intimate knowledge of the
repertoire of French film and stage acting talents, but Siodmaks comments
also point to the central contradiction of the film. Whilst the surface of the text
presents a gallery of distinctly recognisable Parisian character types and lo-
cales, the narrative also draws attention to the unreliability of such appear-
ances. In fact, most of the central characters are engaged in some form of du-
plicitous performance and these performances are cues for an exploration of
another kind of Paris, another kind of reality. Just as Liliom hovers between a
minutely detailed, if somewhat stylised, realist drama of dark Paris and a
lighter, more fanciful and metaphysical version of the city, so Piges simi-
larly plays with the Paris we know. A mysterious and shadowy encounter
on a Parisian street corner between Adrienne and an unnamed stranger turns
from a conventionally noir-like encounter to the revelation that the stranger is
156 City of Darkness, City of Light
Batol (Jean Temerson), the buffoonish police inspector and bodyguard who
lives with his mother in an ordinary Paris apartment. The constrained and or-
dered world of a bourgeois Parisian mansion is the setting for an intricately
structured international prostitution ring. Central to these sets of interlocking
parallels is the way the virtuous duplicity of the female lead is seemingly mir-
rored by the shocking and murderous duplicities of the male lead played by
Chevalier. And so because of the way Siodmak cast Chevalier against type, we
come to the greatest play on the question of performance that the film con-
tends with.
15
subject to a willful and penetrating intelligence. If Boyer represented a more
timeless, cultivated tradition of Parisian culture, Chevalier, fashioned a com-
plex identity in relation to the French capital that had its origins in the working
class milieux of the 19th and 20th arrondisements. Chevalier was born in
Mnilmontant, on the edge of Belleville and so, according to his own mythol-
ogy, his character was informed, from the beginning, by a sense of geograph-
ical and cultural division. Belleville, he wrote, was a swarming rabble
[which] made it seem like the capital of the faubourgs of Paris. (...) Brave and
honest lads were used to rubbing shoulders with the pimp suspected of the
most awful deeds. Mnilmontant, by comparison, was a bit like a calm parent;
gentle and in some way, poetic (198). Chevaliers first stage performances, at
local caf-concerts, were as an earthy comic singer in the tradition of Dranem.
Only after the First World War, when he learned English in a German pris-
oner-of-war camp, did he begin to play on his origins and appear as the arche-
typal Parisian gavroche for the bourgeois, grand music-hall venue audience.
His persona became a complex negotiation between nostalgia and modernity,
between a past and a contemporary urban identity. On the one hand, Cheva-
lier acknowledged the image of the cheeky Parisian (...) with his gouaille
(cocky Parisian banter), his accent and his gestural arsenal: the swaying gait,
the putting on for show, the shrugging of the shoulders, the raising of his hat
with his hands in his pockets or the armholes of his waistcoat (Vincendeau
1996, 95); yet, on the other hand, he also signalled something more contempo-
rary. By also adopting the recognisable trademarks of the bow tie and boater
and a looser, more syncopated orchestration to his melodies, he embodied the
more metropolitan sophistication of the urban dandy who was just as at home
among the upscale modern milieux the casino or the luxurious art deco mu-
sic hall as the working class streets. Central to this modernity are two other
inter-related factors which also contributed to Chevaliers subsequent success
as a film star technology and international travel. Through the developments
of gramophone recordings and radio, the stars rendition of Paris was per-
formed and circulated for audiences beyond the contours of the citys geo-
graphical boundaries. In the printed fan magazines, Chevalier became associ-
ated with other signifiers of modern life like the automobile and jazz and this
accelerated his integration into an internationalised discourse of Parisian iden-
tity which was then reinserted into popular on-stage performances for tourists
at leading French venues.
Charles Boyer and Maurice Chevalier were both, therefore, conventionally
cast in the light Parisian tradition of representation. They shared a double cine-
matic appeal which meant something identifiably Parisian, and thus French,
to both the national and the international film audience. For the domestic spec-
tator, this appeal could mean a sense of intimate recognition and pride Che-
158 City of Darkness, City of Light
16
valier was called notre Maurice national. To the international public, Boyer
and Chevalier were the signifiers of an exportable version of national identity.
Boyer, for instance, was called the ambassador of French film to the United
States.17 In Liliom and Piges the two stars were, however, seemingly cast
against type. In Langs film, Boyer is a rough but somewhat lovable Parisian
former petty criminal whereas, in the Siodmak vehicle, Chevalier, is cast as a
raffish and well-connected night-club owner who actually spends a good deal
of the film suspected of being the serial killer. These reversals foreground the
means by which the two films, as migr productions, stage a sense of division
between the city of darkness and the city of light.
Vincendeau (1996, 95) has argued that Chevaliers French films of the 1930s
reconcile the dichotomy between the world of luxury and the world of popu-
lar Paris in his star persona by situating the narratives within the sphere of ur-
ban spectacle or performance. This is true if we look at Avec le sourire
(Maurice Tourneur, 1936), for example. At the beginning of the film, we see
Chevalier strike a Chaplin-esque pose on a road to Paris to seek his fortune. He
is dressed in conventional workingmans clothes including a proletarian cloth
cap. By the end of the film, by dint of his lan and natural cheek, he has worked
his way up from doorman to theatrical revue performer to the position of di-
rector of the Paris Opra. Although Chevalier is now habitually found wear-
ing a dinner suit, the fluidity and ease of his body language and character still
mark him as separate from the dour, stiff bourgeois male he has replaced as di-
rector. In Piges, Robert Fleury is already a man at the top but, as with Avec le
sourire, one who is not readily identified with urban high culture. He is intro-
duced at a classical concert, where he is seen complaining to his friend that
there are no pretty women around. Be quiet and listen to the music!, his com-
panion retorts. Arent there any lyrics?, a surprised Chevalier wants to
know. Later, during the interval, Fleury is called our ambassador to Parisian
night life. These remarks are the hallmark of the conflation of a man of specta-
cle with that of the archetypal Parisian dandy/lover that Vincendeau argues
ultimately leaves Fleury positioned in the narrative as an empty shell (97). In
a film in which the motifs of disguise and transgression are paramount, Fleu-
rys tragedy, she points out, is not that of a judicial error but that of the
myth of the Parisian seducer (97).
The core of Vincendeaus argument rests in the way that Piges manages to
integrate the luxury-popular dichotomy into Chevaliers persona via the two
songs he performs and the milieux in which they are set. The first song, Mon
amour, is sung in Fleurys flagship nightclub, whilst the second, Il pleurait
comme une madeleine, takes place at the more modest Bal du Cordon Bleu with a
decor of muralled trellises, chains of bobbing lights and decorations reminis-
cent of the popular milieu of a guinguette. At the nightclub, Fleury sings as
Divided City 159
Brmontire are a kind of couple in the film to the extent that they are doubles
of one another. An example of this is the way that Brmontire is seen as the se-
rial killer, the man of shadow, whilst Fleury is seen as the serial seducer, the
man of spectacle. This is certainly true in relation to the way the film contrasts
the conventionally bright jocular banter of Fleury in his natural milieu and the
noirish psychology of the office scene when Brmontire is finally unmasked.
The distinction is also a matter of the difference between the performances of
the two actors. The solidity and gravity of Pierre Renoir serves as a counter-
weight to the extreme mobility and lightness of Chevaliers body language.
However, the figure of Chevalier is further divided in the sense that the film
also performs darkness on him whilst accommodating his natural milieu
of performance and light spectacle. If we contrast the way, for example, Fleury
is portrayed in his nightclub and the way he is portrayed when he is taken
away to the police, we see more than a commentary on the inherent hollowness
of his persona, we also discover a particular mode of choreography and artifice
which chines with the works of other migrs who worked in French cinema.
Fleurys nightclub is associated with space, light, whiteness and depth,
with an emphasis on round forms, which is exemplified by the way that the
milieu is established. Siodmak opens the sequence with a high-angle shot with
a considerable depth of field. We see an extravagant decor of spiralling col-
umns, a central oval stage and, in the foreground, a set of tables and spectators,
which encircle the stage area. A flamenco dancer begins to move rightwards
across the stage. This motif is continued in the subsequent medium long-shot
in which we see Adrienne descending one of the stairways in the same direc-
tion. The camera commences with a slow rightwards, circular tracking move-
ment at the moment when a waiter greets Adrienne and takes her to Fleurys
table. During this, the luxurious, brightly lit features of the nightclub are delib-
erately highlighted. The importance of the setting supersedes that of the clubs
owner. In this sense, the mise-en-scne exemplifies what might be termed an
migr double focus of attention between narrative intrigue and the
playing for effect of set pieces (Elsaesser 1984, 279). However, this disparity
is subsequently abandoned during Chevaliers performance of Mon amour.
Through its inherent energy and fusion of melody and physical display, Che-
valiers performance draws fellow guests together to form part of a whole. The
star moves his body and eyes to catch the gaze of the diegetic spectators. Even
his hands re-iterate the circularity of the aforementioned decor in an inclusive
fashion. The lighting is also softer in the sense that there are no harsh edges
and the performers features are well highlighted.
But during Fleurys interrogation at the police station, all of this is reversed.
The emphasis here is on fragmentation and dislocation to the point where
even Chevaliers trademark evening wear disintegrates; his shirt is unbut-
Divided City 161
toned, his hair is ruffled, and his bow tie dangles loosely around his neck. It is
as if the Paris with which the performer has become identified has been over-
taken by a different, darker urban identity an identity which anticipates the
noirish investigations of Siodmaks subsequent film career in Hollywood.
Again, we return to Elsaessers remarks on the use of cinematic mise en scne
as an instrument of abstraction and the ability to treat lighting or editing ef-
fects (...) as cinematic signifiers in their own right (1984, 281). The space in the
room is compressed and shallow; there is no sense of integration based on the
inter-relationship of decor, light and actor. Instead, the lighting works inde-
pendently and non-naturalistically in the form of a heightened commentary
on the proceedings. The police inspector is shot in medium close-up and is sur-
rounded by pools of darkness. The overall lighting is dim but we see the dra-
matic use of a hard side light that accents the expressive contours of the mans
face in relief. When we cut to Fleury, he almost appears to be pinned down. His
body language is inert. As the discussion proceeds, the lighting takes on a life
of its own. Siodmak frequently cuts back to a slightly downwards-tilted me-
dium close-up of Fleury in which Chevaliers former highlighted facial fea-
tures are now flatly lit as if they are being viewed through a greyish gauze. A
black shadow is cast onto the upper part of his brow. As the interrogation
reaches its denouement and it appears that, according to the circumstantial ev-
idence, Fleury is guilty after all, this shadow moves across the rest of Cheva-
liers face. His eyes, now blank and still, register disbelief. Whilst this disbelief
undoubtedly is supposed to be shared with the audience, the overall purpose
of this sequence is to unsettle the fixity of the light Paris embodied by Che-
valier as man of spectacle.
If Piges is mostly concerned with the figure of the wealthy male Parisian
seducer, Liliom is concerned with the world of another familiar trope of Pari-
sian masculinity, the impoverished mauvais garon. What is more, if Siodmaks
film works with the notion of a light Paris being troubled by criminality and
darkness, Langs drama examines the disruption of the conventions of the
city of darkness by the metaphysics or mysticism of light and redemption.
More or less a synonym for the figure of the apache, the mauvais garon was an-
other incarnation of the criminal Parisian tough found in the popular films and
literature of the period. The term was such a clear signifier of a certain Parisian
culture that it even became celebrated in the light social comedy of disguise,
Un Mauvais garon (Jean Boyer, 1936), which featured Henri Garat singing
the title song. Charles Boyer was cast against type in Liliom although he had
already played a denizen of Berlins underworld in the French-language ver-
sion of Siodmaks Tumultes. In Langs film he plays a boyish, exuberant
ex-small criminal closely associated with the city milieux of the fairground life
and the rough terrain and small wooden houses of the zone. As with Chevalier
162 City of Darkness, City of Light
his attention. In the subsequent shot this is revealed to be Julie and her female
companion.
The problem with Boyers performance in Liliom is that it remains at the
level of gesturality and mannerism. It forsakes depth, the seal of authentic-
ity that would allow the films depiction of the popular milieux of Paris to
move closer to the currents of poetic realism. The matter is complicated by the
inter-relationship between the various performance registers and the contri-
butions of Lang and Rudolph Mat to the films visual style. Liliom feels di-
vided between a conventionally dark realist representation of the city and a
more moralistic and mystical sensibility, which combines moments of calcu-
lated theatrical abstraction. The difference between Madeleine Ozerays interi-
ority and Boyers exteriority, for example, is evident in a key moment near the
beginning of the film after the two have left the fairground and moved to a de-
serted park bench. By examining the sequence more closely, we can see how
the migr filmmakers interest in the processes of visual narration counter-
acts, rather than complements, some aspects of Boyers persona. A police raid
has just interrupted Liliom and Julie and they are now alone standing in front
of the bench under a lamppost. The police have warned Julie that Liliom is
only after her money. The setting is an area of rough ground on the edge of the
city. We can see the painted silhouettes of apartment blocks and factories in the
background but the action takes place on a very shallow spatial plane, which
allows Mat to distinctively manipulate the levels of light falling on their faces.
At first, the camera maintains the same distance from the couple that it did
when the police officers filled the frame. This effect of empty space reinforces
the theatricality of the moment by creating a sense of a proscenium stage set.
Throughout the sequence, the camera maintains it frontal position. A chance to
mark space in a more fluid, cinematic way is avoided. Whilst Julie stands in-
ertly and silently gazing at Liliom, Boyer turns around on his heels and walks
toward her deliberately. He shrugs his shoulders dramatically and self-con-
sciously turns to sit down. As Julie also sits down, Lang cuts closer, eliminat-
ing the foreground so that the couple fill the frame. The majority of their bod-
ies are well lit in the chiaroscuro manner that is typical of Mats
cinematography; the edges of their features are juxtaposed sharply with the
flattened black shadow behind them. Julie tells Liliom that if she had any
money she would gladly give it to him. Startled by this, Liliom turns to her and
the camera starts to track in. Whilst Ozeray is relatively quiet and her eyes
move slowly and certainly, Boyer raises his arms and shakes his partner in dis-
belief. Suddenly, the lightings pitch diminishes and the couple are now
bathed in a more prominent shadow. We cut to a long shot of a man responsi-
ble for dousing the gaslights. Liliom points to the lamp next to him and asks if
it is going to be extinguished. The man replies that it is only every other street-
164 City of Darkness, City of Light
light that is doused. This disruption of the narrative by the deliberate empha-
sis on the processes of the manipulation of light works in a twofold manner.
Both circumvent the centrality of Boyer in the shot. Firstly, the foregrounding
of light and darkness works in a textual fashion. Our attention is drawn to the
shots visual style rather than the characters and their words. Secondly, it pre-
figures the metaphysical motif which divides the film into two visual themes
that of the darkness of Paris and the light of the afterlife and heaven from
which the earthly world can be reviewed and reassessed. As Liliom continues
his seduction of Julie, the camera slowly tracks in to a remarkable full close-up
of the couples faces. There is more light on the face of Ozeray, as Boyer is re-
mains in profile. Her eyes are turned towards the night sky as she declares that
she doesnt have any fears, not even of death. The screen goes suddenly black,
as a foreboding of what is to come. What could have been an intensely modu-
lated exchange that rendered the ordinary city at night a place of poeticised de-
sire as in Marcel Carns Htel du Nord, for example becomes, instead,
something more deliberate and abstract.
In Piges and Liliom, the two main protagonists, Adrienne and Liliom, un-
dertake significant journeys in relation to the city of Paris. Adrienne, by turn-
ing from a taxi-girl to police informer, is given a form of mobility which al-
lows her to escape the world of the urban prostitute. Working undercover, she
encounters a dark side to the surface of the Paris of luxury, wealth and glam-
our before finally joining that milieu when she ultimately marries the man
hitherto suspected of the murders which she has been hired to investigate.
Liliom, on the other hand, is denied his escape from the Parisian faubourg to the
United States of his dreams. His death, however, takes him literally high above
the city and into a fantastic other world where he is given a second chance to
rediscover the values of mundane domesticity which he had previously ig-
nored in favour of street crime and the dark world of the citys night life.
How do the two films stage these movements in relation to the issue of their
status as migr-related productions? And how does this shed light on certain
prevalent mythologies of the city concerning gender and place?
The sensibility of Piges is evident from the opening shots which, in the
manner of numerous 1940s Hollywood film noirs to come, present the city at
night as an abstract site of dangerous motifs highlighted by a stylised conjuga-
tion of light and shadow. There are, at first, no discernible symbols or mentions
of Paris to help orientate the audience. Instead, we begin with footsteps in the
Divided City 165
dark and a torch casting its beam on a discarded newspaper before shining its
light on a nearby brick wall on which are illuminated the names of the films
cast. Following the credits, a Parisian newspaper headline fills the screen an-
nouncing the mysterious disappearance of a number of young girls. The news-
paper is a key feature in the film. It has two aspects, which Siodmak used else-
where in his French migr productions. Firstly, it works as a cinematic emblem
of the modern city: its speed and modernity in conveying urban information is
matched by the nature of the film medium. Secondly, it is also, somehow, the
voice of the city the means by which the film suggests that the fabric of Paris
is involved in the drama as an audience and as a commenting voice. In Piges,
a third dimension is introduced; the newspaper becomes the means by which
the killer and other men lure young women to fulfill their desires.
Next, we see the shadow of a male figure passing in front of the doorways
and walls of a darkened street. This is followed by a dramatically lit close-up of
a gloved hand putting a letter addressed to the Paris police in a post box. The
chain of the detective enquiry in the film is therefore established. The rest of
the film will be concerned with the task of uncovering the identity of the
stranger. At the police station, the film dissolves from a close-up of the letters
final line You will leave for your last dance to a flashing neon sign advertis-
ing Taxi-girls. Dancing. La Danse. 2f. This form of urban display suggests
more than the seedy marginality found in the city of darkness. The notion of
the taxi-girl is a curious extension of the films themes since this euphemism
for a prostitute can also be read as an evocation of the sense of journeying
across the city which the films narrative is mainly concerned with. The key to
this journeying is the consistently uneven and dangerous power relationships
between Adrienne and the men that she meets in the city. In the dance hall, for
example, Adriennes job is to sell a ride across the dance floor to an un-
known male customer. In front of this dance space we see an extensive mural
depicting the splendours of the Place de la Concorde. When Adriennes real
life journey across the city begins, the murals suggestion of Parisian luxury,
fashion and glamour actually comes to life as she meets Fleury and the other
men. Her position in terms of power remains the same throughout, however.
She is always being led by some male stranger around the sights of the French
capital.
Adrienne makes two Paris car journeys in the film, which relate to the
theme of division the film has established between the city of darkness and the
city of light. In the first, Adrienne crosses the Seine over a bridge where she has
just had her first mysterious encounter with Pears. Earlier she had met another
stranger at a jazz club. The scene with Von Stroheim is shot as a Gothic melo-
drama, entirely at odds with the night-time modernity of the jazz venue. The
lighting is low-key and Pears intentions are vague as he makes an appoint-
166 City of Darkness, City of Light
ment with Adrienne for a rendezvous the following afternoon. The conclusion
of their conversation is marked by a cut-away shot to the stranger at the jazz
club waiting next to a car. After walking away from the bridge, Adrienne en-
ters the frame of the shot of the waiting man. Her features emerge from the
shadows. She accepts his offer to get into the vehicle and the shot fades out to
black before swiftly fading into a two shot of the couple driving through the
city. This dynamic of a pick-up on the street between a male and a female
stranger, and the sense of motion through an unmarked urban environment at
night, seems a strikingly modern anticipation of the iconography of the Amer-
ican film noir. Quite incidentally, this aspect of cultural translation is foretold
by Adriennes real occupation as a German, French and English translator,
which serves rather nicely as an exact mirror of Siodmaks own professional
career.18 As other cars flash by, the occupants of the vehicle are momentarily il-
luminated, but the males features remain barely visible. The frame of the
windscreen, like that of the railway carriage in La Crise est finie, is used as a
secondary frame within the overall frame of the moving image. Adrienne tries
to escape but she cant.
The scene cuts to another noir motif the apartment staircase on which the
troubled relationship between protagonists is underscored by disturbing sets
of angles and the use of shadow. The journey to the top of the staircase takes
even longer than the one in the car. This emphasises the way that the city of
darkness, as fashioned by the contribution of the migrs, can work as a signi-
fying element in its own right, rather than as a simple backdrop to the pro-
cesses of character interaction. In the first shot, for example, the pair enter the
left hand frame at a diagonal. As they turn rightwards to climb the stairs, their
enlarged shadows follow them on the wall in the background. As they pause,
Adrienne turns around to look down at the man following her. Her face is
completely blackened as she asks the stranger why he lied to her. Dont play
the innocent, he replies, you were a taxi-dancer. As they continue up the
stairs, the light begins to dim to create the effect that the characters are now an
element in a highly choreographed interplay of shapes and abstract formal
compositions. At another key instant, the shadow of one of the banisters falls
across Adriennes face as she speaks. This reproduces a sensation of division
and disguise which the narrative has already established. The stranger then
literally pulls her into the shadows when he tells he that he knows she is work-
ing for the police. It is only when Adrienne is pushed inside the apartment that
we learn that the stranger is actually Inspector Batol who has been assigned as
Adriennes bodyguard. The effect of this sequence is multi-faceted. Firstly, it
establishes the motif of disparity in relation to Adriennes place in Paris. Her
ability to read the desires of Parisian men that she learned while picking up
male passengers at the dance hall is thwarted. Instead, she gets taken for a
Divided City 167
ride, both literally and metaphorically. Paris now becomes a site of vulnerabil-
ity for her as she becomes the potential next victim of the killer. Secondly, the
idea of hidden surfaces is also developed with the police and their agent work-
ing in disguise both against and with each other. Finally, in another aspect of
the complex patterning of the narrative, just as Brmontire doubles Fleury, so
Batol is set up here as competitor to Tnier.
Adriennes mobility in the city is exemplified in the montage sequence in-
volving light Paris that follows her decision to marry Fleury after it appears
the murder case has been solved. The couple take a tour around the capital and
go on a shopping spree in a convertible. Adrienne, to comic effect in the night-
club sequence, has always known the correct champagne to drink, and sud-
denly she is now able to purchase the city lifestyle she has always aspired to.
What distinguishes the rapidly edited sequence of familiar Parisian tourist at-
tractions and luxury establishments is the ironic ease with which Siodmak un-
dermines the Chevalier persona. He is seen diegetically as a Parisian per-
former relaying his act as a seducer-dandy to the characters, whilst at the same
time he breaks the boundaries of convention by involving the screen audience
by winking at the end of the sequence. The lightness of the tone, the fluency of
the montage, the witty interaction between image and score and the sense of
space and movement all contrast with the darkness and menace of the previ-
ous intrigues. But it is this very ironic tone, along with a subtle commentary on
the mechanics of visual display that marks the sequences distinctiveness. It is
as if Siodmak is also gently sending up the entire artifice of commonly held no-
tions about Paris. The sequence is clearly dealing in surfaces. The imagery of
the Arc de Triomphe, the Opra and the rue de Rivoli flashing by, as well as the
use of the chauffeur-driven convertible, all connote a touristic postcard image
of the city. The dynamic inclusion of these differentiated aspects of the day-
light city works in strong contrast to the way the city at night was excluded
and rendered abstract in the films previous noirish car journey. There is also a
preponderance of mirrors in the mise-en-scne as well as obvious cinematic de-
vices such as wipe cuts and various dissolves. In the fur salon, because of the
large mirror on the wall in the background we see how the parade of models is
linked to form a blur of reflection and reality. Each woman in this montage dis-
plays an item of clothing subsequently taken by Adrienne. At the same time, it
is clear that these women have also been seduced by Fleury, thus establishing a
chain of serial consumption that is simultaneously sexual and material.
Lilioms journey away from Paris begins with his suicide. The railway
bridge and the zones wasteland milieu, combined with the criminal act, make
it similar to the opening scenes of Litvaks Coeur de lilas. Lang, however, is
more interested in the spiritual, metaphysical bond between the dying man
and his wife than the tragi-heroic fate of the poetic-realist male. He cuts imme-
168 City of Darkness, City of Light
diately to a shot of Julie sewing at home. She clutches her chest in pain as if she
is sympathetically feeling Lilioms suffering. From this moment on, the films
depiction of the city becomes more stylised with Mats cinematography in-
creasingly working against the currents of dark realism in favour of a more
heightened display of technique. The contrasting worlds of Julie and Moscat,
the two women in Lilioms life, are now marked with more exaggerated relief.
At the fairground, for example, where Alfred goes to tell Moscat about what
has happened, the shadows of the rotating poles of the merry-go-round on
which Liliom used to work swirl disturbingly across the harshly lit features of
the attractions owner. As Elsaesser has noticed elsewhere, in relation to other
French migr films, space and light are used here to define time as emotional
intensity, as the passage from innocence to knowledge and regret (1984, 282).
Outside the workers cottage where she lived with Liliom, Julie is framed in a
pool of shadow. Her muteness and the stillness of her body work in direct con-
trast to the shrill banter and emotional arm waving of Florelles Moscat. In a
sense, these two women embody the two versions of the city that the film cap-
tures. In a not untypical association between femininity and Paris, Langs film
thus seems not only divided in terms of its metaphysics between heaven and
earth but also in terms of its burdensome morality which contrasts the dan-
ger and pleasures of the fairground with the safety and order of the home. It is
not surprising then, that it is at this point that popular Paris dies, along with
Liliom, whilst the spirituality and enduring values of Julies domestic world
endure.
The death of popular Paris in Langs film is managed in a remarkable and
heavily stylised sequence, which reveals the apparent umbilical relationship
between Liliom and the city. As Julie holds Lilioms arm on the ground outside
their home, the sounds of the fairground gradually fade into the soundtrack.
We cut to a shot of a pensive Moscat who is approached screen right by the
shadow of a police officer. The rotating shadows of Lilioms merry-go-round
continue to flicker across her features. As she hears the news of Lilioms death,
Moscat nearly collapses but she still manages to descend the stairs to tell the
rest of the fairs members the news. The urban entertainment world, to which
Liliom once belonged, comes to a halt in a succession of tableau shots. These
images range from an abstract interest in decor and fairground machinery to a
semi-documentary style depiction of the sorrow of the ordinary Parisian com-
munity. The shots almost suggest a formal division between the Germanic
and French modes of filming the details of urban life.
We first see a carefully composed close-up of three of the merry-go-rounds
mechanical musical figures as they come to a halt. Lang then cuts to a complex
shot depicting the slowing down of the merry-go-rounds shadow on the walls
of a nearby hotel. There is a couple in the upper right-hand corner watching
Divided City 169
and listening to the stop in the flow of music and energy. The shot of the re-
volving figures on the wall suggests a ghostly transference of the real bodies of
the local city dwellers onto the actual body surface of the city itself. Next we
see a man stop a fortune wheels spin. Lang cuts to the somewhat abstract im-
age of a gramophone horn before shifting to a shot of one of the fairground
workers announcing Lilioms death. A succession of images then re-enacts
Lilioms passing away through the depiction of various clockwork toy devices
that grind spontaneously to a silent standstill. The fairground seems to have a
life of its own. This sense of the uncanny sits uneasily with the following near
still-life shots of local faces caught in the process of private mourning. One
particular image, that of a group of figures in a local city bar, looks as if it has
been taken from a contemporary illustrated magazine rather than the
worked-over formal vision of a Fritz Lang drama.
This specific disjunction in the portrayal of Paris may account for the rela-
tive failure of the film at the box office. Lang and his fellow migrs, as many
critics noted, simply got the tone wrong. The film was, in this sense, too hetero-
geneous. Jean Fayard, for example, suggested that the old commonplaces of
populist cinema [were] badly situated.19 Jean Laury, as noted earlier, argued
that Liliom was in fact a German film that was at once realist and mystical.20
170 City of Darkness, City of Light
The key to this conflation of the realist and the mystical rests in the way
that Lilioms narrative is divided between the city of Paris and the city of
God. The manner in which Lang blends the urban ordinary and the extraordi-
nary in the scenes of Lilioms ascension to heaven recalls the directors use of
the uncanny in his preceding film, Das Testament der Doctor Mabuse.
There is, however, a significant difference here due to the important inclusion
of the French capital as a site of meaning. Mabuse represented an unsettling of
the general artefacts of urban modernity such as railway lines, gasworks, and
chemical factories. Liliom works, instead, with the specificities of a Parisian
male mauvais garon who is trapped in the film between an abstract form of
moral redemption and the particularly French fatalism of the poetic realist
hero.
This conjugation of the bizarre with the everyday is most apparent when
the celestial white-faced messengers, dressed in black with white gloves, ar-
rive to take the films eponymous hero away. Their visit is accompanied by an
unreal, mechanised humming sound. One of the figures raises a hand and in
the next shot Liliom rises from the ground. As the camera pulls away, the back
lighting fades so that by the time Liliom is upright, the background is com-
pletely dark. The messengers then lift Liliom up and are shown ascending
with him, leaving the empty shell of Lilioms body behind. As the trio soars
higher and higher, the diminishing figure of Liliom remains centre-frame until
the image fades into a mottled blur. The point which he occupied in the frame
is replaced by the outlines of a building. The camera begins to move across an
aerial view of the city at night. Street lamps shine through the nocturnal
gloom, though Paris below remains indistinct there is no formal point of ref-
erence. Suddenly, we are high enough to be able to make out the familiar grid
of the French capital with the River Seine and its islands. For a moment Paris
returns to us but we are, by now, far away from the quartier populaire. This is the
iconic city one would see as a visitor. This is the Paris, indeed, one would see
on a journey the city of someone who now, like Fritz Lang himself, was in-
deed on a journey to another destination.
6 Conclusion
The French film journalist Henri Calef, in a 1933 interview with the migr di-
rector Kurt Bernhardt, observed that the cinema is an excellent vehicle for the
intensification of relations between two nations it permits not only a richer
mutual knowledge but also a greater mutual understanding.1 Calefs utopian
ideals were apparently akin to those of the future director of Carrefour who,
in another meeting with the Parisian press, argued that the presence of foreign
filmmakers in France was the only means by which to achieve an interna-
tional cinema.2 This book has examined what happened to these aspirations
in relation to a number of different migr filmmakers encounters with the
French capital in the 1930s. Some, like Fritz Lang and Billy Wilder, stayed but
briefly, their eyes firmly fixed on the next stage of their journey: the United
States. Others stayed longer. Bernhardt himself turned down an offer by Hol-
lywoods Columbia Studios in 1936, preferring to remain, for the time being, in
Europe. Filmmakers like Robert Siodmak and Victor Trivas worked in France
for the rest of the decade with varying degrees of professional and financial
success. Whilst Siodmak eventually directed a number of features, Trivas
made but one film and spent the rest of the 1930s fitfully engaged in various
scriptwriting opportunities before narrowly evading arrest by moving to the
South of France.
The arrival in Paris of various film personnel from the studios of Berlin must
be seen within the context of a complex history of travel and exchange between
France and Germany. This history was framed by a pattern of ambivalence
which in turn informed the way that the two countries respective film indus-
tries tilted between mutual rivalry and mutual concern as they both responded
to the increasingly hegemonic position of the United States in the world film
market. The city was an important location from which to understand this pro-
cess; not least because of the significant fact that each countrys capital had long
been central to dominant definitions of national cinema in terms of production,
exhibition and representation. As Siegfried Kracauer observed, contemporary
cinema in the post-First World War period had a particular affinity for the con-
tingent aspects of urban life. This was strikingly demonstrated by its unwa-
vering susceptibility to the street a term designed to cover not only the
street, particularly the city street in the literal sense, but also its various exten-
sions, such as railway stations, dance and assembly halls, bars, hotel lobbies
[and] airports (in Gleber 1999, 145). The urban-based films which had ema-
nated from the Berlin studios in the 1920s were admired by the French for their
technical sophistication and complex handling of visual style; but they were
also seen, simultaneously, as harbingers of a particular response to modernity
172 City of Darkness, City of Light
which French film culture seemed unwilling to make. The arrival of migr
filmmakers on French soil was therefore also viewed ambiguously. On the one
hand, the travellers were welcomed for the degree of proficiency that they
would bring to an under-resourced native industry; but on the other hand, they
were regarded with suspicion because they were perceived as a threat to an
already precarious employment situation, and because of their potential to dis-
rupt governing notions of what constituted French cultural identity.
The journeying foregrounded by the real experience of the filmmakers was
paralleled by wider notions of transition that were illustrated in a number of
their films. The recurring narrative thread of a journey to or across the capital
suggested a sense of the city as a destination to be viewed as a bright spectacle.
Other journeys of exploration to the city at night relayed a sense of social con-
cern and investigative curiosity. In this sense, many migr films made specific
use of pre-existing Parisian mythologies dating back to nineteenth century
practices of portraying the city. The films went on to extend this analogous re-
lationship to pre-cinematic forms of urban representation by largely insisting
on a seamless continuum of remembering and nostalgia in order to evoke a fa-
miliar and pleasurable sense of a past urban community. In fact, far from help-
ing to create a completely new practice of international co-production one
which foregrounded the very cosmopolitan modernity their own identities
signified the migrs, to a great extent, colluded with existing French modes
of cultural representation. Instead of turning to the immediacies of modern
city life, as might be expected, they largely helped to consolidate the previous
discourses of light and darkness in Parisian live entertainment and contempo-
rary literature and photography.
This phenomenon must be seen as part of the inevitable transformative pro-
cess of cultural assimilation and adaptation that all immigrants undergo upon
arriving in a new host culture. As Hamid Naficy notes, this process relates to
the ways all kinds of migrs transcend and transform themselves to produce
hybridised, syncretic, performed or virtual identities (2001, 13). Having said
this however, the migr filmmakers described in this book clearly contravene
the model of film practice Naficy uses to describe present-day exilic cinema.
Naficy suggests that because exilic films are deterritorialised, they are deeply
concerned with territory and territoriality (5). This is certainly true in the case
of the German migrs, but only in the reverse, rather melancholic, sense. The
migrs were, of course, deracinated, but their fleeting fascination with French
film culture was truly bittersweet. To survive professionally, they had to por-
tray a new homeland rather than engage with a direct screen memory of their
previous domicile. Furthermore, they then had to depict this alien city in more
or less nostalgic terms. The migrs were thus excluded twice over: first, be-
cause they would never truly belong to present-day Paris, and second, because
Conclusion 173
the urban world they were working so hard at to represent was one that they
had never known or could ever imagine belonging to in the first place.
To a certain extent then, the distinguishing features of the film migrs set-
tlement within the host culture of Paris remain hard to place. This is also partly
because the migrs were already part of a functioning European trade net-
work, and partly because, upon their arrival, many of the filmmakers were
subjected to the fitful and often precarious commercial nature of the French
film industry in the 1930s. Having said this however, many of the migrs did
noticeably mediate traditional Parisian representational tropes with an incom-
ing awareness of the expressive possibilities of film form. In some cases, this
meant new attention paid to the processes of cinematic narration; in other in-
stances, it meant a sophisticated and revelatory handling of light. In his inter-
view with Paris Midi, Kurt Bernhardt suggested that one of the major faults of
the German cinema had been to place too much visible attention on technique.
A good film, he declared, should make the audience forget the presence of
the camera.3 Previous scholarship on the migrs in Paris has largely con-
curred with this assessment, arguing that the French films of the German
migrs suffered from an over-determined sense of form in which objects and
visual effect may have mattered more than actorly performance.
It is certainly true that one way of understanding the specificity of many of
the migrs Paris productions is to see them as hybrid or multiple on the basis
of their singular contribution to visual style. Unlike other figures in the broader
history of 1930s German emigration, the migrs did not need to rely so
heavily on the professional significance of the written word. Indeed, as mostly
newcomers to France and to French cinema, they were naturally inclined to fa-
vour visual language over an indigenous interest in the cultural specificities of
written dialogue. Naficy has even argued that an aesthetic of self-referentiality
may be an indicative trait of exilic filmmaking (2001, 271). But in some cases,
the migrs heightened attention to the processes of visual storytelling specifi-
cally served the needs of cultural adaptation. This was especially true in the
case of the dark city film which privileged a sense of visual uncovering and
looking, and a particularly concentrated and intense awareness of the interplay
between light and shadow in relation to the urban decor. Here it was largely
thanks to their specific technical prowess that the migrs were allowed to fit in
while simultaneously remaining different. By being adept at both meeting and
contravening expectations of what a French film about Paris should look
like, they sidelined Bernhardts broader aspirations of becoming a truly inter-
national counter-ballast to American hegemony, and instead contributed more
directly to the specific viability of the French film industry.
Thanks to sustained investment and their training in the Berlin studios, cin-
ematographers like Kurt Courant and Eugen Schfftan attained a level of tech-
174 City of Darkness, City of Light
nical expertise that was unrivalled in all of Europe. They were able to experi-
ment effectively with faster film stocks and new lighting technology. The
results of this sophisticated expertise was revealed not only in the films they
made, but also in their beneficial role as educators to native French profession-
als. The importance of the attention the migrs paid to the expressive visual
possibilities of the medium therefore clearly went beyond the hollow mechan-
ics of any formalistic argument. Their contribution rests on the fact that their
presence often went to the heart of an ongoing debate over the direction that a
competitive French cinema should take regarding the relative significance of
the image and the spoken word in relation to the new sound technologies.
They made lasting contributions to the development of what Anatole Litvak
termed real cinema especially in the field of lighting and cinematography.
This type of filmmaking went on to achieve numerous critical and commercial
successes towards the end of the decade, especially in the genre of poetic real-
ism. It remains an interesting irony that French efforts to create a meaningful
and internationally successful cinema were so explicitly aided by their leading
industrial rivals.
This technical and expressive awareness had also been shaped during the
Berlin studios heyday when a predilection for a more unsettling and mod-
ern-day style of cinematic urban darkness resulted in a number of successfully
exported films in the 1920s and early 1930s. A further irony can be found in the
fact that it was partly the very success of these earlier films that lent weight to
the outbreak of xenophobic French voices protesting the arrival of the
post-1933 wave of migrs. By conflating German Jewishness with urban dis-
order and morbidity, the French right-wing turned what might have been
merely an economic argument into a critical and political dispute over the di-
rection of how one should understand the city. A study of the work of the Ger-
man migrs in Paris therefore raises fascinating historical questions about
both the nature of European film culture and the wider terrain of national po-
litical life. Paris may have been a natural destination for fellow European film-
makers to take advantage of a pre-existing web of contacts, but it was also, for
many, a place of refuge for those with vulnerable ethnic identities.
Most of the journeys made to the French capital after 1933 were made for
political reasons by Jewish personnel. Their arrival thus helped to raise impor-
tant questions about assimilation and cultural difference. These issues went
beyond the immediacies of the French film industry. Frances right-wing gen-
erally portrayed Jews as symbolising the perils of mass industrialisation and
modernity. They served as the locus for resentments concerning the heteroge-
neous nature of urban culture which were fed, in turn, into the general fears of
instability engendered by economic recession. Thus, the relationship between
the migrs and Parisian representation matters in more ways than one. The ti-
Conclusion 175
tle of this book may foreground the eras recuperative and essentially nostalgic
cultural conventions surrounding Parisian representation, but it also has a set
of other, more immediately relevant, historical resonances.
The arrival of so many migr filmmakers on French soil in the 1930s clearly
forces us to revise our untroubled assumptions about what constituted a
French national cinema of that particular period. The French capital was a site
of wide-ranging cultural, social and political significance for both the migrant
and the native. Finally, if a sense of divided perception remains in the way the
spaces of the city were variously portrayed, perhaps this can be only expected.
As refugees on a journey from an oppressive political regime and faced with a
far from embracing welcome from a fractured French film industry, many of
the migr filmmakers were literally divided within themselves.
Notes
1 For further discussion of this important analogy see, amongst others, Wolfgang
Natter (1994) The City as Cinematic Space: Modernism and Place in Aitken and
Zonn (eds.) (1994); Guiliana Bruno (1993) Streetwalking on a Hidden Map; and Anne
Friedburg (1994) Window Shopping.
2 See, for example, Jacques Belmans (1977) La Ville dans le cinma de Fritz Lang Alain
Resnais; Catherine Boulgne et al (eds.) (1987) Cits-Cins; Hillairet, Prosper et al
(eds.) (1985) Paris vu par le cinma de lavant garde 1923-1983; Franois Niney, (ed.)
(1994) Visions Urbaines and Michael Sheringham (ed.) (1996) Parisian Fields.
3 Many migr films, of course, were not even set in Paris and thus fall out with the
immediate concerns of this book. These titles include, for example, most of the
body of work that Max Ophls produced whilst in the French capital On a vol
un homme (1933); La tendre ennemie (1936); Yoshiwara (1937); Le Roman de
Werther and Sans lendemain (1940). Similarly I have not discussed the French
migr projects of G.W. Pabst such as Mademoiselle Docteur (1936) and Le
Drame de Shanghai (1938).
4 Books which discuss the Hollywood work of the German migrs include: John
Baxter (1976) The Hollywood Exiles; Anthony Heilbut (1997) Exiled in Paradise; Gra-
ham Petrie (1985) Hollywood Destinies. European Directors in America, 1922-1931;
Gene D. Phillips (1998) Exiles in Hollywood: Major European Film Directors in Amer-
ica; and John Russell Taylor (1983) Strangers in Paradise: The Hollywood Emigrs
1933-1950.
3 As Abel (1988, 12) points out, Bernards film, like so many others of the time, di-
vided Parisian critics along political fault lines. For Paul Reboux (in Abel, 94), the
film didnt go far enough in condemning the monstrous absurdities of war. It
only served to confirm world opinion as it currently exists on the subject of
France: an isolated country (...) imposing harsh economic measures and regula-
tions on its neighbours. On the other hand, for the right-wing journalist Lucien
Rebatet (in Abel, 95), the film demonstrated the vitality of the masculine virtues
of our race.
4 See also Georg Simmels earlier influential comments on the inter-relationship be-
tween nervous stimulation and the regulation and exchange of money in contem-
porary city life in his 1903 essay The Metropolis and Mental Life (in Frisby and
Featherstone (eds.) 1997, 174-185).
5 There is now a significant body of literature drawing upon the correlations be-
tween urban Weimar society and the cinema culture of the period. See, in particu-
lar, Sabine Hake (1993) The Cinemas Third Machine; Patrice Petro (1989) Joyless
Streets; Bruce Murray (1990) Film and the German Left in the Weimar Republic; and the
various articles collected in New German Critique 40 (Winter 1987). The following is
a selection of the vast number of texts which treat the Weimar republic more
broadly: Keith Bullivant (1977) Culture and Society in the Weimar Republic; Peter Gay
(1974) Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider; John Willet (1978) The New Sobriety:
Art and Politics in the Weimar Period; and Edward Dimendberg et al. (eds.) (1994)
The Weimar Republic Sourcebook. For a cultural study of Berlin see Haxthausen and
Heidrun (eds.) (1991) Berlin: Culture and Metropolis.
6 The Straenfilm, according to Elsaesser (in Vincendeau [ed.] 1995), was a German
film genre (...) describing a particular German urban melodrama made between
1923 and 1930, in which a middle class (generally male) protagonist strays onto
the street seeking relief from the ennui and the moral confinement of bourgeois
existence, while a lower class (generally female) protagonist tries to escape the un-
derworld milieu. Typically, the protagonists are chastised or destroyed by the ex-
perience of the citys darker or licentious side (personified in the figure of the
prostitute). While testifying to the iniquities of modern urban life (...) [they]
tended to end up deterministically reaffirming existing class divisions and the pri-
macy of middle class values (409). See also Anton Kaes (1996) Sites of Desire:
The Weimar Street Film in Neumann (ed.) (1996).
7 The Kammerspielfilm, again according to Elsaesser (in Vincendeau [ed.] 1995), was
a German genre designating films produced during the early 1920s which drew
on the conventions of contemporary German theatre. The scriptwriter Carl Mayer
created the genres narrative model in his screenplays for Scherben / Shattered
(1921), Hintertreppe (1921), Sylvester Tragdie einer Nacht (1923) and Der letze Mann
/ The Last Laugh (1924). Characteristically, the plot is a realist drama portraying ser-
vants or members of the lower middle class who meet with a tragic end through
murder or suicide. Most Kammerspiele films were set indoors and drew on innova-
tive cinematic techniques (...) exemplified in (...) minimal use of titles and expres-
sive camera movements (235).
8 Other important work on the inter-relationship between femininity, modernity
and the city includes: Andreas Huyssen (1986) Mass Culture as Woman. Modern-
isms Other in Modleski (1986); Janet Woolf (1990) Feminine Sentences: Essays on
Notes 179
Women and Culture; Elizabeth Wilson (1991) The Sphinx in the City: Urban Life and
the Control and Disorder of Women; Anne Friedburg (1992) Window Shopping and
Elizabeth Wilson (1992) The Invisible Flaneur, New Left Review no. 191 (Janu-
ary/February 1992).
9 For a further discussion of this relationship between mass entertainment, moder-
nity and Americanisation see Peter Wollen (1991) Cinema / Americanism / the
Robot in Naremore and Brantlinger (1991).
10 For Benjamin on Paris and Berlin, see in particular: On Some Motifs in Baude-
laire in Illuminations (1992) and A Berlin Chronicle in One-Way Street (1997).
11 Paul Morand (1888-1976) was a novelist who also specialized in travel and short
story writing. He prospered as an international diplomat under the patronage of
the cultural annex of the French Foreign Ministry which was established in the im-
mediate post-World War One period. His novel LEurope galante (1925) surveyed
the corrupt nature of European high society whilst the impressionistic stories pub-
lished in Ouvert la nuit centred on a series of short-lived entanglements between
the narrator and a succession of foreigners. Morand tried his hand at scriptwriting
for the equally international Paramount outlet in France but only his script based
on the afore-mentioned short-story collection was accepted and made into a film.
He became increasingly outspoken against the influx of foreigners entering France
after 1933, and after his duties as Vichy ambassador to Rumania and Switzerland
during World War Two, his reputation became permanently compromised.
12 Tobis-Klangfilm came into being on 13 August 1929 as the result of an accord be-
tween the two most significant German sound patent holders: Tonbild-Syndicat
A.G. (Tobis) who held the Tri-Ergon patent and Klangfilm G.m.b.H. The bulk of
the finance for the Klangfilm organisation came from the German electrical con-
cerns Siemens and A.G.E. See Icart (1974) LAvenement du film parlant in Les
Cahiers de la cinmathque no. 13-15.
13 Cinmatographie Franaise 23 February 1929, p. 11.
14 See Kristin Thompson (1999) The Rise and Fall of Film Europe in Higson and
Maltby (1999) (eds.).
15 Feyder was also one of a number of French directors and performers employed by
Hollywood in the early sound period to make French language version films actu-
ally in the United States. These included M.G.M.s popular successes Le Spectre
vert (Jacques Feyder, 1929) with Andr Luguet and Big House (Paul Fjos, 1930)
with Charles Boyer.
th
16 Film production figures from Cinmatographie Franaise 4 January 1930. Film ex-
port figures from Cinmatographie Franaise 2 May 1931, p. 15. It should be noted,
however, that the relative weakness of the French export position to Germany was
not solely the fault of the French film industry. Throughout the early sound era,
French film exports were placed in a disadvantageous position vis--vis the Ger-
mans because of a strictly enforced system of export license payments. French ex-
porters continued, despite vigourous negotiations between the two countries, to
pay between 200, 000 and 300, 000 French francs per film to the German authorities
(source: Cinmatographie Franaise 2 May 1931. p. 15). C.F. Tavano wrote in the
same issue of Cinmatographie Franaise that reciprocation between France and
Germany has only been a trompe loeil, almost a bluff. The colonisation of our
screens (...) is a danger as serious as that of a war (11). From the point of view of
180 City of Darkness, City of Light
the Germans, however, they were put in this invidious position by the significant
downturn in receipts and the collapse of many small businesses and corporations
following the onslaught of the Depression.
17 German and American representatives met in Paris in June 1930 to agree on terms
upon which to divide up the world market according to their mutual interests.
France was the most significant European market left to the forces of open compe-
tition. The Paris Agreement was never formally ratified and despite the efforts
of a second conference held in 1932, it was not until 1935 that the matter was for-
mally resolved. See Crisp (1993), 99.
18 Cinmatographie Franaise 23 February 1929, p. 14.
19 Cinmatographie Franaise 23 March 1929, p. 35.
20 The actor, playwright and film director Sacha Guitry was still making the same
point in his 1932 article Pour le thtre et contre le cinma. In it he declared that
he did not like current French films because they [were] not deservedly French.
When they make a film in France, they do everything to make it international. (...)
If the French cinema is to exist one day, it must stand clear of the American formu-
las; it must absolutely be itself (in Abel 1988, 101).
21 Cinmatographie Franaise 22 June 1929, p. 22.
22 The film, based on material developed by G.W. Pabst and starring Louise Brooks,
was eventually released directed by Augusto Genina.
23 This an interesting reversal of the Franco-German reception of Das Cabinett des Dr
Caligari (Robert Wiene, 1920) when the film was first lauded by the French before
subsequent success in Germany. See Kristin Thompson (1990) Dr Caligari at the
Folies-Bergre, or, The Success of an Early Avant-Garde Film in Budd (1990).
24 Cinmatographie Franaise 30 August 1930, p. 36. For further commentary on this
crucial question of the specific potential of early 1930s French-language sound
cinema, see also Abel (1988) French Film Theory and Criticism 1907-1939: A His-
tory/Anthology 1907-1939 Vol. II; Ginette Vincendeau (1990) In the name of the fa-
ther: Marcel Pagnols trilogy Marius (1931), Fanny (1932), Csar (1936) in Hay-
ward and Vincendeau (eds.) (1990), and Christopher Faulkner (1994a) Ren Clair,
Marcel Pagnol and the Social Dimension of Speech, Screen vol. 35 no. 2 (Summer
1994).
25 The first actual German-French sound production had been La Nuit est nous/Die
Nacht gehrt uns (1929) which was directed respectively by Henry Roussell and Carl
Froelich in Berlin for U.F.A. Marie Bell, Henry Roussell and Jean Murat starred in
the French-language version, whilst Hans Albers and Charlotte Ander starred in
the German version. The sound for the film was recorded on both disc and film.
26 Cinmatographie Franaise 14 March 1930, p. 7. Carl Froelich in Berlin for U.F.A.
Marie Bell, Henry Roussell and Jean Murat starred in the French-language ver-
sion, whilst Hans Albers and Charlotte Ander starred in the German version. The
sound for the film was recorded on both disc and film.
27 Cinmatographie Franaise 8 February 1930, p. 15.
28 Pour Vous 31 July 1930, p. 14.
29 Cinmatographie Franaise 4 July 1931.
30 Le Courier cinmatographique no. 18 (4 May 1929), (in Courtade 1978, 65).
31 Raoul Ploquin (1900-unknown) worked as a journalist and publicist in Paris be-
fore he was engaged by Films Albatros in 1924. He wrote a number of film scripts
Notes 181
in the early 1930s and was then employed as a production supervisor for A.C.E. in
Berlin on films such as LEtrange Monsieur Victor (Jean Grmillon, 1938) and
Adrienne Lecouvreur (Marcel LHerbier, 1938). Between 1940 and 1942 he was
the director of the Comit de lorganisation de lindustrie cinmatographique
(C.O.I.C.) which managed French film production during the Occupation of
France. In 1943, he founded his own production company, Les Films Raoul
Ploquin, which went on to make Robert Bressons Les Dames du Bois de
Boulogne (1945). I make two sorts of films, he said. First those of which Im
certain, thats to say films with Brigitte Bardot for which I select subjects which
allow her to be seen in an appropriate light. Then, films which shouldnt be made,
but which it would be a shame not to make; those also which, thanks to the tact
and talent of the director, incorporate some degree of experimentation (in Crisp,
282-83).
32 Cinmatographie Franaise 30 November 1929, p. 14.
th
33 Pour Vous 26 July 1932, p. 11.
34 Le Radical 11 February 1932.
35 LIntransigeant 24 April 1932.
36 Pour Vous 15 January, 1931, p.3.
37 in Cinmatographie Franaise, 13 September 1930, p. 24.
38 Ibid.
39 Pour Vous 23 October 1930, p.6.
40 Le Radical 11 February 1932.
41 The story of the Russians in France is told, in much greater detail, in the following:
Franois Albera (1995) Albatros: Des Russes Paris 1919-1929; Lenny Borger (1989)
From Moscow to Montreuil: the Russian migrs in Paris 1920-1929 in
Griffithiana no. 35-36 (October 1989), and Kristin Thompson (1989) The Ermolieff
Group in Paris: Exile, Impressionism, Internationalism in Griffithiana no. 35-36
(October 1989).
42 Cinmatographie Franaise 8 February 1930, p. 16.
43 in Cinmatographie Franaise 17 October 1931, p. 11.
44 Cinmatographie Franaise 31 October 1931, p. 15.
45 Cinmatographie Franaise 19 December 1931, p. 115.
46 Cinmatographie Franaise 10 October 1931, p. 11. The following year, in an article in
the Cinmatographie Franaise (25 June 1932, p. 47), Lucie Derain suggested that
films shot with more than 20 per cent foreign personnel (...) shouldnt be called
French but Franco-German, Franco-Russian, Franco-American etc..
47 France-Soir 17 December 1974.
48 Pour Vous 22 June 1933, p. 11.
49 Le Jour se lve had been previously photographed by Kurt Courant, Litvaks cine-
matographer on Coeur de lilas and Cette Vieille canaille. (Interestingly, the title of the
remade film, The Long Night (1947), puts the emphasis on darkness rather than
light). Litvak also directed his own American remake of Lquipage, The Woman I
Love, in 1937.
50 Cinmonde 31 December 1931.
51 Cinmatographie Franaise 30 November 1929, p. 14.
52 For an interesting reversal of the commonly perceived distinctions between Clair
and Pagnol in relation to the depiction of social reality see Faulkner (1994a). Ac-
182 City of Darkness, City of Light
Wiene died before the end of the decade and Pottier was successful in obtaining
full French citizenship.
71 Among the figures who stayed there at this time were Rudolph Joseph (G.W.
Pabsts assistant); Billy Wilder, Hanns G. Lustig; Peter Lorre; Friedrich Hollaender
and Franz Waxman. See Kevin Macdonald (1996) Emeric Pressburger. The Life and
Death of a Screenwriter, 103.
72 On 9 January 1934 Alexandre Stavisky, a petty Parisian criminal with high society
connections, was found dead either a suicide or a murder by the police.
Stavisky, a Jew, had been suspected of financial fraud by selling bonds which later
proved to be worthless. His case revealed a murky series of jurisdicially and politi-
cally corrupt entanglements. Staviskys trial had been postponed 19 times by the
Paris procurator, the brother-in-law of the Prime Minister Camille Chautemps and
Chautemps Minister for the Colonies, Albert Dalimier, had advocated the bonds.
The resulting lack of accountability lead to street protests which culminated in the
eventual resignation of the leading political protagonists.
73 Eugne Dabit (1898-1936) also edited E.E. Noths migr novel LEnfant cartel for
the journal Europe and participated in the activities of the Associations des cri-
vains rvolutionnaires. He was an important spokesman for the League Against
Anti-Semitism. Htel du nord had won the first French Prix populiste for a literary
work of populist fiction. Dabit produced other works of fiction, memoirs, and crit-
icism before his premature death while visiting the U.S.S.R. with Andr Gide.
74 Pour Vous 26 January 1933, p. 3.
75 Pour Vous 18 May 1933, p. 2.
76 Cinmonde 25 May 1933.
77 La Cinmatographie franaise 30 June 1933, p. 45.
78 This debate was not restricted to the film industry. An argument also raged about
how truly French those Germans were who had been naturalised as French citi-
zens. In a culturally symbolic moment in 1935, the newly elected Miss France, a
naturalised German named Mlle. Pitz, was forced to resign and was replaced by
the more appropriate Mlle. Giselle Prville. A newspaper declared that this time
Miss France will be French! in Weber (1995) 92 .
79 Paths subsidiary was Literaria, Gaumonts was Deutsche Gaumont-Gesellschaft
and Eclairs was Deutsche Eclair Film.
80 See Hardt (1996) From Caligari to California: Erich Pommers Life in the International
Film War s, 87-93 for more on the intricacies of the so-called Parafumet agreements.
81 It was later suggested by Ophls in his memoirs that it would have been better if
he and Lang had reversed their assignments. Had we exchanged the films, Lang
most likely would have made an extraordinary mystery and I a very good roman-
tic comedy he said (in Hardt 1996, 142).
82 Pour Vous 31 August 1933, p. 14.
83 Ibid.
84 The film, Music in the Air was to be Pommers first Hollywood feature after leav-
ing France. It was produced almost entirely by fellow migrs with Joe May as di-
rector, Billy Wilder as co-scriptwriter and Franz Waxman as musical director.
85 Cinmatographie Franaise 28 October 1933, p. 30.
86 Action Franaise 28 April 1934.
184 City of Darkness, City of Light
87 In 1934, Goebbels ordered the integration of the company into the Tobis trust un-
der the name of Rota-Film AG.
88 Paris-Midi 21 May 1933.
89 Siodmak in Cinmonde 8 June 1933.
90 Je Suis Partout 2 September 1933.
91 See Cinmatographie Franaise 30 June 1934.
Montparnasse are paradise / One says it to oneself seeing all these chants and
shouts / You only see that in Paris.
12 See M. Boyer (1994) The City of Collective Memory for a further discussion on the
shifting relationship between urban space and theatrical space. Taking as her start-
ing point that the Greek word theatron means literally place for seeing (74)
she argues that both the theater and urban space are places of representation, as-
semblage and exchange between actors and spectators, between the drama and
the stage set (74).
13 Ginette Vincendeau (1985a) develops this point by claiming that the histories of
theatre (and music hall) and cinema [are] (...) intimately linked in France in the
1930s, on the level of production, finance, and personnel (113). She argues that
cinema and live entertainment, by co-existing through an inter-textual relation-
ship, shared genres, extra-textual practices such as printed publicity and song re-
cordings, modes of performance and even audience loyalties. Vincendeau sees
the privileging of the actors performance [in so many French films of the 1930s]
as the crucial link with the audience (137). She goes on to claim that, very often,
performance in these films is not what the actor does in addition to his or her
function in the plot, but it is that very function (141). Dudley Andrew (1995a) also
notes that within most of the hundreds of films built around or including forma-
lised songs, dances, recitations, and the like, simple reverse shots display an origi-
nal audience whose admiration or disapproval of the performance serves as a
model for our own reaction. (...) It could be said with only slight exaggeration that
the French cinema of the 1930s (...) is a cinema of reaction (97).
14 Caradec and Weill (1980) mention that the Paris Guide, produced by Lacroix for
as far back as the Exposition of 1867, signalled to visitors that the Caf de Gant,
lEldorado, and lAlcazar were worthy of exploration (7). By the time of the 1900 Ex-
position, according to the Guide des plaisirs specially produced for the occasion,
Paris was a city of extraordinary pleasures, the pleasure capital of the whole
world (145).
15 Bach and Milton, two of the most popular comic male entertainers in the 1930s
film industry, both came from caf-concert backgrounds.
16 Mainly the 9th and 10th arrondisements or what Maurice Chevalier called the
quadrilateral of song to describe the world of theatres, agents, publishers, and
costumiers based in this area. See Jando (1979) Histoire mondiale du music-hall (25).
17 Sung by the chanteuse raliste Lys Gauty in the famous recorded version.
18 Images of street children playing and visual accounts of the urban working classes
integrating leisure and national pride can also be found in the myriad of
photo-journalistic publications of the era.
19 See also Kelley Conway (2001) Diva in the Spotlight: Music Hall to Cinema in
Alex Hughes and James S. Williams (eds.) (2001). In this interesting article she ex-
plores gender issues in relation to the performances of a number of music hall di-
vas in four French films of the 1930s.
20 Date of first publication: 1880.
21 This attitude was the norm for wealthy male visitors in Paris at the time. Take, for
example, this prescient quote (in terms of the narrative of La Vie Parisienne)
taken from an article written by Lon Gozlan in 1852 on What It Is That Makes a
Parisienne in Goulemot and Oster (1989) La Vie Parisienne. Anthologie des Moeurs
186 City of Darkness, City of Light
1 See, for example, the following illustrated articles published in Pour Vous: Le
Drame de la foule et son decor (23 November 1933), Vues de Paris (11 Novem-
ber 1937), Paris Romanesque populiste (9 November 1938) and Paris, Studio de
cinma (6 September 1939).
2 Paris Midi 16 November 1933.
3 Ibid.
4 Cinopse March 1934.
5 Andrjew also worked with the other migr directors discussed in this chapter:
with Anatole Litvak in Cette vieille canaille (1933) and Mayerling (1935); Kurt
Bernhardt in LOr dans la rue (1934); and Le Vagabond bien-aim/The Beloved
Vagabond (1936). He travelled between France and Britain throughout the 1930s.
For further information on Andrjew, see my chapter A Cosmopolitan Film Cul-
ture: Exile and Emigration in Classical French Cinema in Temple and Witt (eds.)
The French Cinema Book (London: British Film Institute, 2004). For an informative
discussion of Eislers subsequent work in the United States, see Claudia Gorbman
(1991) Hanns Eisler in Hollywood, Screen, vol. 32 no. 3 (Autumn 1991).
6 See Abel (1988), 34.
7 For further discussion of literary adaptations in the French cinema of the 1930s, see
Andrew (1990) The Impact of the Novel on French Cinema of the 1930s, LEsprit
Crateur vol. XXX no. 2 (Summer 1990).
8 The Zille film was a more politically self-conscious off-shoot of the German
Straenfilme which took its name from the work of the influential Berlin city artist
Heinrich Zille. As Bruce Murray (1990) observes in his analysis of Die Ver-
rufenen (Gerhard Lamprecht, 1925), while the street films warned middle class
and lower middle class spectators about the possibility of downward social mobil-
ity and advised them to avoid social interaction with the lower classes, the Zille
films offered hope to those who began to question the myth of upward social mo-
bility (84). See Petro (1989, 90-94) for more on the inter-relationship between the
development of German photojournalism and late-silent cinema.
9 La Cinmatographie franaise 8 April 1933.
10 See Vincendeau (1998) Pp le moko, 31.
11 Known in France as Sur le pav de Berlin.
12 Pour Vous 14 January 1932.
13 LIntransigeant 20 February 1932.
14 Dd seems to be a popular name for a male street criminal. The name appears in
numerous other dark city films of the period. See, for example: Paris Bguin
(Alberto Genina, 1931), Prisons de femmes (Roger Richeb, 1938) and Faubourg
Montmartre (Raymond Bernard, 1931).
15 Related to this point of documenting Paris, one should also note the work of Mar-
cel Pote who was instrumental in setting up the coles des Hautes tudes
Urbaines in 1919. See Norma Evenson Paris: A Century of Change (1979), 266.
16 For an interesting discussion of the 1930s feature films of Pierre Chenal, see An-
drew (1995a) Mists of Regret, 160-66.
17 Pour Vous 9 June 1932.
188 City of Darkness, City of Light
18 Cinmonde no. 277 (8 February 1934), previously cited by Andrew (1995a, 371).
This translation is mine.
19 Petit Bleu 4 February 1934.
20 Candide 8 February 1934.
21 Gringoire 2 March 1934.
22 Pour Vous 15 September 1932, p. 9.
23 According to Jack Edmund Nolan (1967) and Kelley Conway (1995, 166), the film
is set in the Porte des Lilas district of Paris. The area was celebrated in popular Pa-
risian culture for the profusion of flowering lilacs in small local gardens.
24 The term apache relates to a bourgeois conception of proletarian Paris as a savage
wilderness both in terms of the quality of its living conditions and the perceived
correlation between the working class and criminality. It goes back to the nine-
teenth century, and might well have been formulated in connection with the popu-
larity of the American wilderness novels of James Fennimore Cooper. By the
early years of the twentieth century, apaches increasingly became the focus of sen-
sational press coverage. They had dens in areas like the Bastille and even be-
came, bizarrely enough, the focus of tourist interest. According to a book quoted
by Joachim Schlr (1998, 138), one could actually go on a Paris By Night tour
and drink a glass of wine with a local character. For other details on the figure of
the apache see also Vincendeau (1998, 39-41).
25 LIntransigeant 20 February 1932.
26 LAvenir 12 February 1932.
27 Gringoire 11 March 1932.
28 Cin-Miroir Almanach (1933). The quotation should also be placed in the context of
the career of Luguet who had worked previously in Hollywood on French-
language version and English-language version films. Coeur de lilas makes use
of its stars linguistic talents in a scene, set in the police station, when he is able to
serve as interpreter on behalf of a detained American sailor.
29 Cinmonde 24 September 1931.
30 See Adrian Rifkin (1993) Street Noises (120-27) and David H. Walker (1991) Culti-
vating the Faits Divers: Dtective Nottingham French Studies vol. 32 no. 1 (Spring
1993), for more on Dtectives seminal coverage of notable crimes and trials ... fea-
tures on clandestine immigrants, international drug trafficking, the white slave
trade, the criminally insane, les bagnards, la pgre, les irregulires, les moeurs des
quartiers rservs, and so on (Walker, 75).
31 In his memoirs (1989, 105), Ren Lucot argues the opposite and actually suggests
that the atmospheric world of the street outside the Path studios at rue Francoeur
blended neatly with the set inside. He claims that the street in the film is modelled
on nearby rue Cyrano-de-Bergerac in Montmartre.
32 Le Courrier 26 September 1931.
33 Ds quon a vu se barrer lsoleil / Tous les jours, cest pareil / Sans hte, on descend sur le
trottoir / Pour chercher les coins noir / Fuyant le regard du flic / On a des espoirs de fric.
As soon as you see the sun setting / Everyday its the same / You go down to the
pavement unhurriedly / In search of darkened corners / Keeping out of the cop-
pers sight / You hope to make a bit of cash.
(The song is performed again in Litvaks subsequent French migr film, Cette
Vieille canaille, in a scene set in a womens prison).
Notes 189
7 Undated documents concerning the French stage production of Liliom from the
Bibliothque de lArsenal, Paris.
8 Pour Vous, 31 August 1933.
9 Paris-Midi 20 January 1934.
10 9 December 1933.
11 Billy Wilder was working as a taxi-dancer in Berlin in the 1920s at the time he met
Robert Siodmak.
12 Le Jour, 18 January 1939.
13 For more on Boyers early sound career in Hollywood see Phillips (2002)
Changing Bodies/Changing Voices: Success and Failure in Hollywood in the
Early Sound Era Screen vol. 43 no. 2 (Summer 2002).
14 The French-language version of this film was actually shot in Joinville, France.
15 February 1932.
16 Pour Vous, 7 June 1939. The continuing loyalty of Chevalier to his home country
needed some promotion however. For the French-language version of Innocents
of Paris (Richard Wallace, 1929), La Chanson de Paris (Richard Wallace, 1929),
for example, Paramount added a special prologue by Chevalier to reassure the
French public that he was still a gars de faubourg (lad of the faubourg). See Rearick
(1997, 120).
17 Mon Film, May 1937.
18 For further speculation on this trajectory between Berlin, Paris, and Hollywood,
especially in relation to the vexing question of the determinants of film noir, see
Vincendeau (1992b) Noir is also a French Word: The French Antecedents of Film
Noir in Cameron (1992); Andrew (1996) Film Noir: Death and Double Cross
Over the Atlantic, Iris no. 21 (Spring 1996); Janice Morgan (1996) Scarlet Streets:
Noir Realism from Berlin to Paris to Hollywood, Iris no. 21 (Spring 1996), and
Elsaesser (1996a) A German Ancestry to Film Noir? Film History and its Imagi-
nary, Iris no. 21 (Spring 1996).
19 Candide 10 March 1934.
20 Le Figaro 29 April 1934.
* French version never released in France because the German actress wanted to
play both versions and her French accent was too lamentable
** Also shot in Hungarian, Rumanian and English versions
*** Also shot in English version
**** Also shot in Hungarian version
Appendices 193
1931
Berlin Calais Douvres; glv Nie wieder Liebe
1932
Vienna Chanson dune nuit; glv Das Lied einer Nacht*
1933
Paris Cette vieille canaille
1935 LEquipage **
1936 Mayerling
* Also shot in English-language version. The film was remade in the United States
as Be Mine Tonight (Anatole Litvak).
** Remake of LEquipage (Maurice Tourneur, 1927). The film was remade in the
United States as The Woman I Love (Anatole Litvak).
194 City of Darkness, City of Light
1929
Berlin Das brennende Herz (Ludwig Berger)
Die Frau im Mond (Fritz Lang)
1930
Paris Le Roi de Paris (Leo Mittler); glv Der Knig von Paris
(Leo Mittler)
1931
Paris Son Altesse damour (Erich Schmidt and Robert Pguy);
glv Ihre Majestt die Liebe (Joe May, 1930) (Berlin)
Le Chanteur inconnu (Victor Tourjansky) (decor Serge Pimenoff)
Coeur de lilas (Anatole Litvak) (decor Serge Pimenoff)
1932
Berlin LHomme qui ne sait pas dire non (Heinz Hilpert); glv Ich Will
Dich Liebe Iehren (Heinz Hilpert) (French version unreleased)
Scampolo ein kind der Strasse (Hans Steinhoff)*
Gitta entdeckt ihr Herz (Carl Froelich)
Dieoder Keine (Carl Froelich)
Rasputin (Der Dmon der Frauen) (Adolf Trotz)
Budapest
Un Fils dAmrique (Carmine Gallone) (decor Serge Pimenoff)
1933
Paris Ces messieurs de la sant (Pierre Colombier)
(flv of Scampolo ein kind der Strasse)
Appendices 195
1934
Paris Amok (Fdor Ozep)
1935
Britain The Passing of the Third Floor (Bernard Viertel)
1936
Britain Broken Blossoms (Septan)
Spy of Napoleon (Knowles)
The Man in the Mirror (Maurice Elvey)
1937
Paris Le Mensonge de Nina Petrovna (Victor Tourjansky)
(decor Serge Pimenoff)
Le Puritain (Jeff Musso, 1937)
Appendix Five:
Erich Pommer French-Language Filmography 1930-1934
1930
Berlin Le Chemin du paradis (Wilhelm Thiele); glv Die Drei von der
Tankstelle (Wilhelm Thiele)
Flagrant dlit (Hanns Schwartz); glv Einbrecher
1933
Paris On a vol un homme (Max Ophls)
Appendix Six:
Robert Siodmak French-Language Filmography 1931-1939
1937 Mollenard
1938 Ultimatum
Les Frres Corses (uncredited)
1939 Piges
198 City of Darkness, City of Light
Plot synopsis
A troupe of theatrical performers, led by Parisian old hands, Olga and Marcel,
decide to seek their fortunes in the capital following the collapse of their show
in the provinces. They arrive to find no work available. Down on their luck, the
troupe make their shelter in a disused theatre. Nicole, a young novice, and
Marcel try to trick M. Bernouillon, a lecherous piano seller, into lending them a
piano to put on a show. Eventually Olga uses her savings to purchase the piano
but meanwhile Bernouillon buys up the theatre with the aim of turning it into
a cinema. Desperate measures are called for to ensure that the first night can
live up to its promise and the crisis is really over. The troupe traps Bernouillon
under the theatres stage and enlists the citys working classes to be their
200 City of Darkness, City of Light
make-shift audience. The film ends with the performance of the show La
Crise est finie.
Review
Plot synopsis
Paris 1900. At the La Vie Parisienne revue Don Ramiro makes his farewells
to Paris and to his mistress Liane. Paris 1935. Don Ramiro returns to the capital
with his innocent grand-daughter Helenita and installs himself at the
Htel-Mondial. The current management of the La Vie Parisienne hopes
that Don Ramiro will help sort out their financial affairs. Jacques, an impecu-
nious aristocrat, makes himself known to the couple. Much to the disapproval
of Helenitas actual father, who also arrives in the city, Jacques and Helenita
fall in love. Don Ramiro, by chance, meets Liane again at the theatre. The two
set about hatching a plan to thwart the fathers resistance to the romance,
which ultimately involves the ordinary people of Paris. In the end, all is re-
solved: Jacques and Helenita stay together and Don Ramiro decides never to
leave Paris again.
202 City of Darkness, City of Light
Review
You could certainly shoot la Vie Parisienne in the way that Offenbach,
Meilhac and Halvy are famous for by trying to recreate the atmosphere of
1867 which was Pariss merriest and finest year. But, in the film of la Vie Pa-
risienne, wasnt it a more interesting idea to compare the former la Vie Pa-
risienne with the current one, to use the brio, the spirit, and situations of the
operetta but transpose them into a modern setting? ... What makes the film es-
pecially unlike any old drama is the fact that it freely adapts a previous success
by exploiting the title. Maurice Jaubert has taken up the famous manner of the
operetta to accompany, underline and comment on the action with exactly the
same mocking verve as that of Offenbach.
Le Figaro, 19 August 1935
Appendices 203
Plot synopsis
Reviews
Ren Clair has already struck a youthful note in his stories of smart and re-
sourceful types which suits the tag of made in France ... With Mauvaise
graine, which will next be shown at the Paramount Theatre, the public will be
204 City of Darkness, City of Light
With the combination of the charming music of Alan Gray and Franz
Wachsmann, which we have already tasted in Emil et les Dtectives, a com-
pletely innovative use of sound, which promises us passionately created
rhythms, and the work of these young actors and technicians well see new
kinds of images unfurl in a sharp and vivacious style.
La Comdia, 8 October 1934
Appendices 205
Plot synopsis
rents a room at the local Charignoul lodgings in order to meet her. He fights
over Lilas with Martousse, a local apache and former lover of the girl.
Martousse is arrested in the course of a police raid. Lucot takes Lilas to a hotel
on the banks of the Marne. Martousse escapes from prison, finds them and
tells Lilas that her new lover is a police officer interested in arresting her.
Struck sideways by the revelation she makes off but eventually turns herself in
to be charged with the offence.
Review
Plot synopsis
Maurice and Jacques, two sons of a war widow, live in the tenements of a Paris
quartier. Maurice, a worker, is resigned to his lot but his younger brother,
Jacques, is dissatisfied with the terms of his life. Jacques is involved with a
band of petty criminals who regularly fall foul of the law. The object of his af-
208 City of Darkness, City of Light
Reviews
A film by Victor Trivas is always an event. The creator of No Mans Land has
proven himself such a master that we know full well that a production bearing
his imprint will contain certain qualities. ... The script of Dans les rues has a
theme of incontestable value. It was inspired by the novel by J.-H. Rosny the el-
der of the Academie Goncourt. ... In the novel, Rosny the elder knows how to
express with feeling and humanity the kind of vague melancholy which, in the
adolescent of the faubourg, is freely translated into a hesitation regarding
which path to take. ... Trivas knows admirably well exactly how to get our at-
tention. At the screening at the Marignan cinema, a difficult public was united
and captivated from the opening images. ... His masterly technique is in evi-
dence throughout the film and it never weakens or strikes a false note. This is
particularly true concerning the atmosphere. ... At the very least, a popular mi-
lieu has been skillfully created. It is somewhat disturbing, a bit too low in so-
cial standing, even lower than Quatorze juillet, but it makes good use of its
elements: the images of a fairground, the astonishing shambles of pre
Schlamp, a second-hand goods dealer and especially the interiors of the
houses with their principle component, the soul of these humble areas, the
staircase.
Le Cinopse, March 1934
The atmosphere here is so heavy, so dark, the scenes are so poorly aerated
that one is frustrated. I believe that the principle fault of the film ... is that there
are a succession of too rigourously compartmentalised scenes, heaped up one
after the other and separated by an overly rigourous visual punctuation. The
staging, similarly fragmented, reminds one strongly of a certain Russian-
German theatricality which one finds in Grand Hotel and Crime and Pun-
ishment. ... In any case this film is a masterpiece of photographic interpreta-
tion. ... Certain exteriors such as the grey dawn over the Seine with Notre
Dame in the distance are especially miraculous. ... Dans les rues is a succes-
Appendices 209
Plot synopsis
lied on his behalf. Vetheuil, who is suffering from amnesia caused by a war in-
jury, visits a Montmartre nightclub and meets its hostess, Michle, who recog-
nises him. Michle is currently Luciens mistress and accomplice but was once
Pelettiers lover. Realising the truth, Vetheuil-Pelletier is caught in a quandary.
Eventually, he is saved from his plight by Michle who shoots Lucien after an
argument. She allows him to return to his new post-war identity.
Review
It has been said and written that Carrefour is a good and fine piece of work.
Far be it for me to contradict such affirmation which with deserved credit must
go to the director Kurt Bernhardt. I would, however, like to rectify the word
work which may have a perjorative sense when applied to a cinematic pro-
duction. I would like to draw out its real meaning, which I am sure colleagues
would have liked to have used. No confusion must be produced when one
finds oneself in the presence of a film which is as coherent and as finely and
scrupulously observed as Carrefour. ... [Kurt Bernhardt and A.P. Antoine]
have conserved on film, through the immense possibilities of cinema, a unity
of danger and menace that presents itself as a moving, poignant, human
drama. Each of the characters from the victim of the atrocious amnesia to the
unscrupulous blackmailer combine to create an atmosphere admirably main-
tained by the succession of images.
Jean Nry, publication unknown, 16 November 1938
212 City of Darkness, City of Light
Liliane Lesaffre
Robert Berri
Eugne Stuber
Charles Vissires
Plot synopsis
A serial killer is loose in Paris and is sending mysterious notes to the police.
Commissioner Tnier and his assistant Batol recruit a young girl, Adrienne, to
help them in their efforts to track down the criminal. Adrienne answers a se-
ries of anonymous announcements in the papers and comes across a number
of individuals including Pears, a former fashion designer and Maxime, the
head butler of a large household. She also meets Robert Fleury, a nightclub
owner and his assistant, Brmontire. Fleury pursues Adrienne and they de-
cide to marry after Maximes arrest for his involvement in a sex slave ring and
the disappearance of a number of young girls. However, the killer continues to
strike, and with Adriennes help, Fleury becomes the prime suspect. Fleury is
arrested but Tnier remains unconvinced and eventually Brmontire is un-
masked as the real killer. Adrienne and Fleury are reunited.
Reviews
The grumpy ones will perhaps say that there are some implausibilities in the
script by Jacques Companez and Ernest Neuville. This isnt untrue, but it
nonetheless remains true to say that Piges is an excellent film, well con-
structed, never boring, and perfectly played by Maurice Chevalier, Pierre Re-
noir, Andr Brunot, Temerson, Jacques Varenne, Erich von Stroheim and a
newcomer, Marie Da who is fresh, ravishing, adroit, and wears her clothes
beautifully.
Pour Vous, 27 December 1939
Piges by Robert Siodmak isnt a great film but it is a very good production
that merits attention for its well-constructed script and the mystery and in-
trigue which are not uncovered until the final images. ... Marie Da who plays
the principal role is a revelation. She has a simple, nuanced, and meticulous
manner of acting and a clarity in her gestures and language that confirm her as
a real gift for the screen.
Candide, 20 December 1939
214 City of Darkness, City of Light
You could say that it is a matter of a police film ... but Piges has neither the
cut nor the rhythm of a police film. What it seems to be is a succession of
sketches destined to bring its comical or bizarre characters to life in front of us.
The slowness and, it must be said, the talent with which the director Robert
Siodmak describes the social milieu of each of his characters scarcely contrib-
utes to strengthening the films illusion.
Georges Champeux, Gringoire, 21 December 1939
Here is one of the greatest French films released since the war. ... Its intrigue is
well constructed, composed as a rising movement of mystery and violence
which is nuanced, however, by charm and humour. ... Throughout there is a
dramatic atmosphere which is admirably composed as much by Wakhvitchs
well-researched dcor as the knowing shadows of Michel Kelbers beautiful
cinematography.
La Cinmatographie Franaise, 23 December 1939
Appendices 215
Plot synopsis
demure and innocent Julie. The couple establish a home and a photography
business with Julies aunt, Mme Menoux, who harbours strongly voiced
doubts about Lilioms character. Liliom frequently loses his temper with his
partner. Julie becomes pregnant and because they are short of money, Liliom
plans a robbery with his criminal cohort Alfred. The scheme goes awry and
Liliom kills himself. He goes to heaven where he is reprimanded for his ac-
tions. Many years later, Liliom is allowed to return to Earth where he meets his
daughter. Back in heaven again, because of his tears, Liliom is absolved.
Reviews
The screen is currently taking up an interest in Liliom and the version that
Fritz Lang has given us is both loose with and faithful to the original. It has a
flavour of humanity which the cinema is unused to. Situated within the partic-
ular order that realism has so often painted with its minutiae and taste for tell-
ing detail, Liliom escapes from the simplistic art which attempts to just photo-
graph life. Molnar is a poet and it is from the basis of the poetry that his fantasy
evolves.
Comedia, 28 April 1934
The Parisian public is not going to unanimously welcome the first French
work by Fritz Lang... the Judeo-Hungarian collaboration between Lang and
Molnar doesnt treat the metaphysical jokes with enough lightness. ... The first
part of the film offers nothing original and there is an accumulation of the old
commonplaces of populist cinema: the fair, the merry-go-rounds, the bistro, the
zone and so on. The greatest fault of all of this is that it is false, stiff, and badly
situated. The action, we are told, unfolds in Paris but all the characters have a
profoundly forlorn and pessimistic German disposition to the point of obses-
sion.
Jean Fayard, Candide, 10 March 1934
The first scenes make you think immediately of Francis Carco ... the lighting
is in this dark manner of the German studios which worsens still further the
overly considered style of the visuals. The effect is to sacrifice the whole for a
number of less important effects.
Le Journal, 4 May 1934
The concern of the director was, it appears, to make a French film where in
fact Liliom is a German film par excellence, at once realist and mystical. The
first part unwinds in the zone internationale with the banal decor of the fair
and the fortifs. The second, takes place at the gateway to heaven and is inspired
Appendices 217
Because of the cleaning performed by the German studios, the Jew Erich
Pommer has settled in our country. ... These crude details of faubourg life: the
turned up nose of Florelle, the gavroche-like air of Roland Toutain are lost un-
der the weight of the lighting of the Berlin studios so that the result is nothing
but a heterogeneous spectacle. ... this French-Jewish-Hungarian collaboration
doesnt create a breathable atmosphere. We return to that bizarre and boring
cinematic country produced by UFAs French-German dramas, a no mans
land a lot closer to the Spre than to the Seine, a Babel emptied of all charac-
ter.
Franois Vinneuil, Action Franaise, 28 April 1934
Those who will be taken in by Liliom will go up in the skies with him. They
will see the angels and the heavens. They will hear the song of the stars. The
others will remain on earth. They will only see in the film the rather banal story
of a carefree and lazy fairground hawker who has a bad head but a good heart
and doesnt know very well how to manage his life. ... A pace thats rather too
slow spoils the movement of the film. Each image is on the screen for too long.
It is too insistent on details. In particular, there is too much dialogue when the
lighting and sound effects would suffice to create the atmosphere. Bernard
Zimmers dialogue is too literary ... what a relief the images are! Fritz Lang and
his cinematographer Mat have understood how to express the tragedy of the
faubourgs with an ambiguous and painfully emotional clair-obscur light.
Jean Vidal, Pour Vous, 3 May 1934
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Index
Notes, Appendices and Filmography have not been indexed apart from the bi-
ographies in the notes and the titles of the appendices. Page numbers in italics
refer to these biographies and titles.