Julien Duvivier(1896-1967)
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Revered by such legendary fellow directors as Ingmar Bergman and Jean
Renoir, Julien Duvivier is one of the most legendary figures in the history
of French cinema. He is perhaps the most
neglected of the "Big Five" of classic French cinema (the other four
being Jean Renoir, Rene Clair, Jacques Feyder, and Marcel Carne),
partly due to the uneven quality of his work. But despite his misfires,
the cream of his oeuvre is simply stellar and deserves to be mentioned
in the same breath as filmdom's most breathtaking masterpieces.
Initially working as a stage actor, Duvivier began his movie career in
1918 as an assistant to such seminal French helmsmen as Louis Feuillade
and Marcel L'Herbier. A year later, he directed his first film,
"Haceldama ou le prix du sang" (1919), which was not successful and
evinced nothing of the lyricism and beauty that would define the
director's later work. He continued directing, however, eventually
earning a job with Film D'Art, a production company founded by
producers Marcel Vandal and Charles Delac. It was here, at Film D'Art,
that Duvivier was to really find his way at an artist. In the 1930s,
Duvivier's talents came into full bloom, beginning with "David Golder"
in 1930. Duvivier's subsequent efforts in this decade, aided by the
advent of sound in motion pictures, would establish Duvivier as one of
the leading forces in world cinema. It was also in the 1930s that
Duvivier began working with Jean Gabin, an actor who would appear in
many of Duvivier's most career-defining films, most notably "Pepe le
Moko" (1937). "Pepe" was the cracklingly entertaining story of a sly
gangster and master thief (Gabin) who lives in the casbah section of
Algiers. A prince of the underworld, Pepe's criminal mastery is shaken
when his arch nemesis Inspector Slimane, exploits a young Parisian
beauty as a ploy to capture this most elusive the casbah's crooks. The
latter film made Jean Gabin an international star and also attained
enough popularity and critical acclaim to earn Duvivier an invitation
from MGM to direct a biopic of great director Johann Strauss, entitled
"The Great Waltz" (1938). Duvivier found Hollywood agreeable and would
later return there during WWII. His wartime output was of varied
quality, one of the most meritorious being "Tales of Manhattan" (1942).
Duvivier returned to France after the war, where he found his
reputation and standing to be badly damaged by his absence during the
war years. He continued to work in France for the remainder of his
life, however, eventually regaining success with such films as the
Fernandel vehicle "Le Petit monde de Don camilo" (1951) which as
awarded a prize at the Venice Film Festival. Duvivier had just
completed production on his final project, "Diaboliquement vôtre"
(1967), when he was killed in an auto accident at the age of 71. Though
his life and career ended with this tragic accident, his legacy lives
on through his films and in the minds and hearts of many.