Historical Dictionary of French Cinema

GANCE, ABEL

(1889-1981)
Actor, director, and screenwriter. Born the illegitimate son of a Jewish doctor and a working-class girl, Abel Gance rose to prominence as one of the most visionary directors of the silent-film era. Until the age of eight, Gance lived with his grand-parents in rural France. At the age of eight, he moved to Paris to live with his mother, who had married Adolphe Gance, the man whose name Gance ultimately took. Although officially the son of Adolphe Gance, Gance's natural father, Abel Flamant, continued to support him. This support allowed the young Gance an education well beyond the reach of his working-class family (Adolphe Gance was a mechanic).
It was clear from an early age that Gance was attracted to literature and theater. He read voraciously and, in 1908, went to Brussels to become an actor, defying his father's wish that he become a lawyer. In 1910, he was hired on as an actor byGaumontand was cast byLéonce Perretin his 1910 filmMolière. He also wrote several screenplays for films directed by Perret, includingLe Portrait de Mireille(1910) andLe Crime du grand-père(1910).
In 1911, Gance left Gaumont to form his own production company,Le Film français, which produced many of Gance's first films, includingLa Digue(1911), a costume drama set in Holland, which Gance both wrote and directed. This was shortly followed by several other films, both written and directed by Gance, includingLe Nègre blanc(1912), an antiracist drama, andLe Masque d'horreur(1912), a short narrative film. He continued also to write scripts for other studios, and some of these were turned into successful films, one example beingUn tragique amour du Mona Lisa(1912) directed byAlbert Capellani.
Gance's vision of cinema, however, stretched beyond that medium's developed capacity, and his experimentation, particularly with light, can be seen even in his early films.As his career developed, this ambition to push the cinema beyond its limits began to find greater form in his work. Experimentation with special effects, for example, characterizes his 1915 filmLa Folie du docteur Tube. His filmBarberousse(1917), a serial made forStudio Film d'art, brought Gance much audience acclaim, if not critical acclaim, and also demonstrates experimentation with camera angles, shot distance, editing, and narrative style. He is often called one of the fathers of the close-up.
Gance's experimental style matured in 1917 in what is considered his first great work,Mater Dolorosa, a psychologically and socially oriented film about an unhappily married bourgeoiswoman. The subject matter and Gance's stylized cinematography, particularly his use of lighting, garnered the film much attention, and it was a huge success both in France and internationally.
In 1919, Gance went to work forPathé, where he made another of his great works, the serial filmJ'Accuse, a war epic that prominently features the carnage of the so-called Great War and which literally calls upon the living to answer for the deaths of those killed. The film's deeply traumatic subject is beautifully rendered in Gance's ex-perimental cinematography, which includes tracking shots, rapid cuts, close-ups, and his typical play with lighting. The film was an enormous success, both domestically and internationally, and it cemented Gance's reputation as one of the great directors of his day.
Gance's second great epic work,La Roue(1923), was begun shortly after the release ofJ'Accuse. The story of railroad workers in France,La Rouehas elements of the poetic realism that would follow a generation later, but it retains the element of artistic self-consciousness that Gance's earlier films demonstrated.La Roue, which Gance once called "a white symphony fading to black," was filmed on location in Provence. Gance makes of the natural landscapes of the Southern Alps living symbols, and of the steam engines around which the narrative centers, contrasting symbols. To his growing repertoire of cinematographic and editing tricks, Gance, in this film, adds montage, which functions to highlight the already symbolic stature of the images on the screen. A long poem on film,La Roueremains one of the great films of all time.
It is perhaps because of the success of films likeLa RoueandJ'Accusethat Gance was given the freedom that he was in making his next film, the famed (infamous)Napoléon vu par Abel Gance(1927), a historical epic that sought to recreate the early political career of Napoléon Bonaparte and that took three years to make. The film was produced byHenri Diamant-Berger, through the director's own, small production company. The cost of the film nearly bankrupted the studio.
The technical innovation that Gance brought toNapoléon, perhaps the greatest technical innovation of his career, was a superexpanded screen that he called polyvision. Polyvision allowed for the projection of enormous panoramic shots and series of tryptich images, in which three screens were visible at once. Both techniques were created by filming simultaneously with multiple cameras, and both pushed filmmaking well beyond anything that had been seen up to that time.Napoléonalso draws on the earlier innovations in Gance's films, including montage, rapid cutting, tracking, and experimental lighting. Although the original, which premiered in Paris in 1927, did not do well at the box office, it remains one of the masterworks of cinema, albeit a controversial one. This may, in part, be due to the fact that few audiences of the day ever saw the full, six-hour version, as the film was often shown in pieces because of its length. Gance made several attempts to redeem the film, which he considered a master-piece. He added sound to the film in 1934, and he reedited and rereleased it in 1971 under the titleBonaparte et la révolution. However, it is widely believed that it is only the most recent rendering of the film by film historian Kevin Brownlow (done in 1981) that truly brings Gance's vision to the screen.
The enormous production costs ofNapoléon(the most expensive film made at the time), coupled with its commercial failure, undermined what had previously been Gance's reputation as a cinematic great. Gance received backing for one more epic film,La Fin du monde(1931), his first sound film, but producers intervened during production and editing, fearing anotherNapoléon. The version that was released was a mere shadow of Gance's vision for the film, and it, like its predecessor, did not do well. As a result, Gance earned a reputation as an eccentric with overambitious ideas, and he had trouble finding the financial backing to make films for a period of twenty or so years.
Gance continued to make films, includingLa Dame aux Camélias(1934) starringPierre Fresnay,Lucréce Borgia(1935),Le Roman d'un jeune homme pauvre(1935),Le Grand amour de Beethoven(1936),Paradis Perdu(1939),Le Capitaine Fracasse(1942),Quatorze juillet(1953),Austerlitz(1960), andCyrano et d'Artagnan(1963), his final film. However, none of these ever achieved the acclaim won by his silent-film era epics. His fame during this period came more from previous achievements than contemporary ones, as he was awarded an international prize for invention for his technical contributions to cinema in 1954, and was named first laureate of the French national cinema in 1974. He was also given an honoraryCésarin 1980.

  1. gance, abelFrench film director. Born in Paris he was initially a stage actor and dramatist. His films include Lafolie du Docteur Tubeem Mater Dolorosaem Jaccuseem La roueem Un gran...Dictionary of Jewish Biography
  2. gance, abelActor director and screenwriter. Born the illegitimate son of a Jewish doctor and a workingclass girl Abel Gance rose to prominence as one of the most visionary directors...Guide to cinema