Historical Dictionary of French Cinema

DUVIVIER, JULIEN

(1896-1967)
Director. Julien Duvivier was born in Lille, in northern France. He had a great love of the theater and had ambitions of becoming an actor. Indeed, he began his career as an actor at the Odéon in Paris under the direction of the greatAndré Antoine. It would later be said that this early period influenced him greatly and that he learned from Antoine to strive for perfection and to aspire to an art that mirrored reality. It was Antoine himself who encouraged Duvivier to leave the theater to go into cinema. Remembered as one of the master technicians among the practitioners ofLe Réalisme poétiqueor poetic realism, it would seem that although Duvivier left the theater, he kept some of what he learned there. Duvivier began his career in cinema during the silent-film era. Antoine had been hired byPathéto direct films for theSociété Cinématographique des Auteurs et des Gens de Lettres(SCAGL), Pathé'sfilm d'artdivision, and Duvivier came along to work as his assistant. His first experience in film was onLes Travailleurs de la mer(1918), an adaptation of a work by Victor Hugo. Duvivier also assisted Antoine onLa Terre(1921), adapted from the Émile Zola novel. Duvivier would work also withAlbert Capellaniat Pathé, and he assisted on such films asQuatre-vingt-treize(1921), the classic silent-film adaptation of the Hugo novel. He also worked forLouis Feuillade, at the time the head of production atGaumont, with Henri Étiévant, with Dominique Bernard-Deschamps, and withMarcel L'Herbier.
This early period in the cinema must have been as important in forming Duvivier as his time in the theater. Capellani, Etiévant, and L'Herbier were masterful directors.Feuillade was himself a master technician and a hyperperfectionist. Most important, his films are seen as important forerunners of poetic realism. It would be naïve to overlook the influence the great director must have had on the young director, just starting out.
Duvivier, for his part, tried his hand at solo filmmaking quite early. His first film,Haceldama ou le prix du sang, was made in 1919. From 1922 on, Duvivier was working almost exclusively alone, often writing the screenplays for his films as well, something he would do throughout his career. His early films includeLes Roquevillard(1922), based on the novel by Henry Bordeaux, and the sequel,L 'Ouragon sur la montagne(1923),Credo ou la tragédie à Lourdes(1924),La Machine à refaire la vie(1924), and the melodramatic religious films,L'Agonie de Jerusalem(1927) andLa Divine Croisière(1929).
The coming of sound to cinema moved Duvivier into another dimension of filmmaking, and some would say that the early decades of sound cinema, particularly the 1930s, were the best years of Duvivier's career. At that time, he was counted among the best directors making films and was often identified with other major realist and poetic realist filmmakers of the day, includingJean Renoir,Marcel Carné,René Clair, andJacques Feyder(together considered the great five directors of the golden age of French cinema).
Duvivier set the pace for his filmmaking in the 1930s withDavid Golder(1931), the film in which he introducedHarry Baurto sound cinema. The film restarted Baur's film career, making of him a major film star of the day, and was the first in a fairly long series of solidly realist, somber, almost noir films that would dominate Duvivier's career for more than a decade. Shortly afterDavid Golder, Duvivier madeAllô Berlin,Ici Paris(1931), a film that captures quite clearly much of the spirit of the prewar era. This film, the story of two telephone operators, one in Berlin, one in Paris, who can speak to and understand one another but who are prevented by circumstances from meeting, seems, in retrospect, a proleptic comment on the failure of those who might have prevented war to come to power.
In 1932, Duvivier madeLa Tête d'un homme, again starring Harry Baur, a very dark Maigret mystery about a man who frames a mentally challenged man for a crime he, himself, committed. In this film, there was a glimpse into the darker side of Duvivier's realism, a side that would show itself more and more frequently over time. This film was followed byPoil de Carotte(1932), a sound remake of a 1925 Duvivier silent film about reconciliation between an emotionally abusive father and his son.Poil de Carotteis considered among the best films Duvivier ever made.
Duvivier's 1934 historical filmMaria Chapdelainemarked the first time the director worked with legendary actorJean Gabin. The collaboration was a fruitful one, and the two would go on to do a number of films together. Gabin would star in the passion filmGolgotha(1935), the war filmLa Bandera(1935), the classic filmLa Belle équipe(1936) — often read as a commentary on the Front populaire, with which Gabin was identified through his work withJean Renoir—the classic noir filmPépé le Moko(1937), and the darkly realistVoici le temps des assassins(1956).
Apart from his work with Gabin, Duvivier directed a number of other classic films, particularly in the 1930s. The costume dramaGolem(1935), starring Harry Baur, remains a solid, well-crafted example of Duvivier's work. The sentimental dramaUn Carnet de bal(1937) is also among the best films Duvivier ever made, and it inspired many similar films.La Fin du jour(1939), starring Pierre Jouvet andMichel Simon, about retired actors in a nursing home, is also one of Duvivier's better films. His talent for casting great actors to perfection clearly shows in this particular film.
Following the success of his films in France, particularlyPépé le Moko, Duvivier was called to work in Hollywood. He did several films in English, particularly during the 1940s, but also continued to work in France. His English-language films includeLydia(1941), starring Merle Oberon;Tales of Manhattan(1942), with an all-star cast includingCharles Boyer, Rita Hayworth, Henry Fonda, and Edward G. Robinson;The Imposter(1944), starring Gabin in an English-speaking role; andAnna Karenina(1948), starring Vivien Leigh. Duvivier's French films from the same period includeUntel père et fils(1943), starringRaïmuandMichèle Morgan, andPanique(1946), starring Simon and Viviane Romance.
After the war, Duvivier concentrated the majority of his efforts on filmmaking in France. He had a hit withLe Petit monde de Don Camillo(1951), starringFernandel, and more particularly with the sequel,Le Retour de Don Camillo(1953). In that respect, Duvivier was able to restart his career after the war, whereas many filmmakers seemed at a loss to do so. Other important films from this later period includeVoici le temps des assassins(1956), starring Gabin and Danièle Delorme, andLe Diable et le dix commandements(1962), starring Fernandel. Duvivier might have gone right on making films, but he was killed in a car crash in 1967.
Often criticized during his lifetime for making "popular" films, Duvivier has proven to be one of the more enduring of the so-called great five filmmakers of the 1930s and 1940s. The standing of his work has not been diminished by the critiques of the filmmakers of theNouvelle Vagueor New Wave, nor has the appreciation of them been changed by the innovations those filmmakers introduced. The great Renoir once said that if he built a monument to cinema, he would place Duvivier's statue above the front door. Perhaps Duvivier's films have taken just such a place in the monument that is film history.

  1. duvivier, julienDirector. Julien Duvivier was born in Lille in northern France. He had a great love of the theater and had ambitions of becoming an actor. Indeed he began his career as a...Guide to cinema