Wanting to see as many films by Julien Duvivier, (who has taken the joint top spot with Giallo master Dario Argento in being my number one directors) as possible,I went looking round fan sites for Duvivier's most obscure credits,and an offering with a cast that looked like a devilish dream come true.The plot-Note: due to this being an anthology,I am going to give each story a separate section.Story 1/Wraparound story:Standing out in the priesthood with his "blue" language, Jérôme Chambard goes full-on when he meets an old friend whose become a senior priest,and they (loudly) catch up on old times. Threatened with being thrown out the church, Chambard pledges to learn the Ten Commandments,but the devil has other plans.Story 2:Getting stripper Micheline Allan as a piece of arm candy, Françoise Beaufort finds out that she is married,and that her husband is unaware about the type of her "dance" occupation. Receiving a diamond necklace from Beaufort,Allan try's to find a way to wear it under her husbands nose.Story 3:Loyally following his religion, Denis Mayeux suffers a loss of faith when his drug addicted sister dies in the arms of big time gangster Garigny. Told that Garigny might (if at all) only serve a short time in jail over assisting to kill his sister, Mayeux begins preying to get his revenge on Garigny.Story 4:Appearing in a farming village,a man claims to be God.Finding himself on a farm whose workers have lost all belief in god,God is asked to perform miracles to get them out of darkness.Story 5:After believing all his life that Germaine is his mum, Pierre Messager finds out that he is an orphan,and that his real mother is big name actress Clarisse Ardan.Meeting Ardan, Messager soon finds out what effect fame has had on her.Story 6:Witnessing all the cash from his workplace get taken by thief Didier Marin right in front of him,a worker decides to turn the tables on Marin.View on the film:Bringing in almost every major star of French cinema,co- writer/(along with Henri Jeanson/Pascal Jardin/Maurice Bessy/René Barjavel & Michel Audiard) unleash a spellbinding work more than worthy for the talent on offer.Keeping the devil hissing on the floor,the writers pull the veins from the ten Commandments for pessimistic tales. Loosely linking each commandment to a segment,the writers (who unofficially "borrow" Roald Dahl's "Mrs Bixby" story) finely spilt the stories between jet-black Comedy and merciless Film Noir. Limiting the wraparound to just the beginning and the end, Duvivier superbly makes his auteur Film Noir heart the major thread, whipping the comedic first and second stories with a lush cynical smirk,and the other tales with a deep Film Noir gaze,where any sign of light is masked by the impending fire of a Noir commandment being lit.Faced with a running time of 2 hours spanning 6 largely self- contained segments,director Julien Duvivier and cinematographer Roger Fellous strikingly link the tales with subtle motifs. Coming to the front of the screen when Mayeux goes biblical on Garigny, Duvivier lines the screen with shimmering rows of shadows,that slowly transform into unrelenting darkness,as the commandment takes hold of the unlucky soul. Offering some hope in the comedic tales with a light score and shiny diamonds, Duvivier tears the optimism down,via blistering the shots of light from the edges.Breaking the first commandment, Michel Simon gives a hilarious flamboyant performance as Jérôme Chambard,whilst the stylish Danielle Darrieux eats up the screen as Diva Clarisse Ardan,and the wonderful Madeleine Robinson holds on to hope that her son will returning. Appearing from the darkest pits of the movie, Charles Aznavour gives an excellent worn down Film Noir loner performance as Mayeux,who is caught in a struggle with Lino Ventura's hard-nosed gangster Garigny,as Alain Delon gives a playful performance as the unlucky Pierre,as the ten commandments of Julien Duvivier are set in stone.
... View MoreBy nineteen sixty three Julien Duvivier was on the homestretch of one of the most distinguished careers in French cinema with just two more films in him and what he didn't know about directing films in general and portmanteau films in particular you could fit in Godard's vest pocket and still leave room for a dozen How To Make A Movie manuals. Bizarrely the DVD - available only in France - is being marketed as part of a Michel Audiard collection despite the fact that Audiard only worked on one sequence as opposed to Henri Jeanson who worked on three. As always in this type of movie there's lots of joy for the French film buff in the names fleshing out the segments, never more so than finding Danielle Darrieux sharing a sequence with Madeleine Robinson - a thirties icon with a forties icon and, in the interests of passing on the torch, they share the segment with Alain Delon. Elsewhere the likes of Lino Venura, Michel Simon and Louis de Funes add their particular lustre but the best, not to say blackest, goes to Fernandel. Given Duvivier's output of top quality fare over six decades it would be incorrect to rate this among his best but even his second best is light years ahead of the Godards of this world.
... View MoreThe film made up of sketches had always been Duvivier's forte:"un carnet de bal" "flesh and fantasy" and "sous le ciel de Paris" were brilliant achievements."Le diable et les dix commandements " seems at first sight a comedy but Duvivier's pessimism is just round the corner.Segment one cast Michel simon as an odd-job man,always swearing,which would not be that much offensive,if he did not work in a nunnery.Here comes the bishop...who is none other than an old pal of his.It's a farce a la "Don Camillo" which Duvivier filmed in the fifties .Segment two is still a comedy,borrowing a lot from Roald Dahl and his "Mrs Bixby " (which Hitchcock adapted for one of his shorts in "Hitchcock presents"),without giving the writer any credit.However ,all they did was replace the fur coat by a necklace .It's funny but disappointing if you know Dahl.With segment three,the tone drastically changes;it's no more a comedy,it's Duvivier's film noir again all over the place:Aznavour is a priest whose purpose is to avenge his sister who became a prostitute and a junkie because of a dangerous liaison (Lino Ventura).There's nothing rosy here and the finale is absolutely desperate.Segment four climaxes the movie :this sketch is a little masterpiece in itself .Duvivier plumbs the depths of sorrow:in a desolate country,a man (Fernandel) arrives in a poor farm where everybody 's lost faith in God ;in front of the house,they've put an Indian totem,which increases the madness of the situation.In a seedy bedroom,an old woman (Germaine Kerjean) is dying :the newcomer tells her he is God and he can help her and her whole family.Here begins a cruel dialog where Duvivier and Jeanson let their inspiration flow and thus take pessimism to new limits.The director's genius shines for the conclusion,which is completely unexpected ,and is a return to farce and derision...A "serious" ending would have led the viewer to despair.but not for long as segment five is some kind of tragedy :A young man (Alain Delon)learns that his mother (Madeleine Robinson) is not his mother ;So he pays a visit to his "true" mother (Danielle Darrieux) ,a celebrated actress.Alas,she's in love with herself.She barely looks at him,always wrapped up in herself,staring at the mirror .The happy end must not fool the audience.Duvivier's tale is a tale of selfishness and indifference.Segment six is the weakest,although it features Jean -Claude Brialy,Louis DeFunes and Jean Carmet fighting for a suitcase full of dough:there's only one good moment:the cop helps Brialy (the thief) to tie his case which is threatening to open.Segment seven returns the viewer to the nunnery where the sisters ask the bishop to teach the crude old man the ten commandments.This is an uneven work:if it were a minor director ,we would approve heartily of it.Coming from Duvivier,one of the greatest artists France had ever had,one could be more demanding.Obviously,the central segments (3,4 and 5) are the core of the movie,as strong as anything Duvivier did .But the rest is not in the same league .Besides,the concept is not always clear:the devil ,who works behind the scenes ,appears between them in the shape of a snake ,not a very original idea.A thousand times better,anyway, than the contemporary "les sept péchés capitaux" .
... View MoreEnchants this film to Me because it is directed with masterful hand by a sensational director as Julien Duvivier. This film is not inferior other more prestigious films in front of like "Tales of Manhattan".Wonderful scenes rolled in Black and White and interpreted very well by many stars of exception: Danielle Darrieux, Françoise Arnoul, Fernandel, Mel Ferrer, Micheline Presle... but the best is ALAIN DELON, who shows why is one of the best actors in the world. I have seen this film 15 times. It catches of convincing the different episodies without boring. It's very interesting to see it.Would be advisable that this magnificent film saw everybody it because it has everything: love, humor, passion, suspense... and unfergettables performances by greats stars !!!
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