Historical Dictionary of French Cinema

MORLHON, CAMILLE DE

(1869-1952)
Director, film pioneer, and producer. Born Louis Camille de la Valette de Morlhon to an aristocratic family, Camille de Morlhon began his career as a playwright. He had a fair degree of success in the theater, writing largely comedies. He metLéon Gaumontthrough their mutual interest in automobiles, and it was Gaumont who encouraged Morlhon to consider the cinema. Morlhon wrote and directed the filmSous l'uniformeforGaumont Studiosin 1908. However, the studio found the film too politically charged since it seemed to evoke the Dreyfus Affair, and Morlhon left and went toPathé.Originally, Pathé hired Morlhon to do literary adaptations. However, he soon developed afilm d'artstyle of directing, and his subjects moved beyond simple literary adaptation to classically influenced historical films and orientalist dramas. He also did the typical farcical comic films that were popular at the time. Morlhon went on to make more than 150 silent films, and he was one of the most significant of the early film directors. Many of his silent films were later remade by other directors during the sound era. While at Pathé, Morlhon made such films asQuand l'amour veut(1908),Un tic gênant(1908),Benvenuto Cellini(1908),Le Roman de l'écuyère(1909),Conscience de miséreux(1909),La Récompense d'une bonne action(1909),Le Fer à cheval(1909),Cœur de Gavroche(1909),Mater Dolorosa(1909),La Belle Niçoise(1909),Mademoiselle Faust(1909),Olivier Cromwell(1909),La Gueuse(1909),L'Affaire du collier de la reine(1910),Le Spectre du passé(1910),Une aventure secrète de Marie-Antoinette(1910),Cagliostro(1910), codirected withGaston Velle,Le Tyran de Jérusalem(1910),Une intrigue à la cour d'Henri VIII(1911),Une conspiration sous Henri III(1911),Britannicus(1912),Vengeance Kabyle(1912),La Haine de Fatimeh(1912),Un mariage sous Louix XV(1912), andLe Fils prodigue(1912).
Morlhon left Pathé in 1912 to found his own production company, Valetta films. He went on to direct such films asLa Calomnie(1913),Don Quichotte(1913),L'Usurier(1913),Le Faux père(1915),Sous l'uniforme(1915),La Marchande de fleurs(1915),Cœur de Gavroche(1916),Le Secret de Geneviève(1916),Fille d'artiste(1916),Marise(1917),Miséricorde(1917),Expiation(1918),Simone(1918),L'Ibis bleu(1919),Une fleur dans les ronces(1921), andTote(1923). Although produced independently, these later films were still distributed by Pathé.
The war put a virtual end to Morlhon's film production. When he resumed directing, it was after the arrival of sound. He did not, however, have much success with sound film and made only one film,Roumanie,terre d'amour(1930). At that point, he gave up the cinema and went into radio, writing and producing radio plays, seeming to do better with sound but no image than with sound and image.
In addition to directing, Morlhon wrote the screenplays for nearly all of his films. In his capacity as a screenwriter, he had a significant impact on the film industry. He actively lobbied for author's rights to films, and in 1917, he foundedLa Société des Auteurs de Filmsto help screenwriters obtain the rights to their work.

  1. morlhon, camille deDirector film pioneer and producer. Born Louis Camille de la Valette de Morlhon to an aristocratic family Camille de Morlhon began his career as a playwright. He had a fa...Guide to cinema