Mademoiselle Fifi (film)

Mademoiselle Fifi

Theatrical poster
Directed by Robert Wise
Produced by Val Lewton
Written by Guy de Maupassant
(short stories)
Josef Mischel
Peter Ruric
Starring Simone Simon
John Emery
Kurt Kreuger
Music by Werner R. Heymann
Cinematography Harry J. Wild
Edited by J. R. Whittredge
Distributed by RKO
Release dates
  • July 28, 1944 (1944-07-28) (U.S.)[1]
Running time
69 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Mademoiselle Fifi is a 1944 American period film directed by Robert Wise for RKO, in his solo directorial debut. It was written by Josef Mischel and Peter Ruric based on two short stories by Guy de Maupassant, "Mademoiselle Fifi" and "Boule de Suif". The film features an ensemble cast headed by Simone Simon, John Emery and Kurt Kreuger, and was produced by noted B-film producer Val Lewton. Produced during the Second World War, the film is guilty of instances of Propaganda common at the time, such as the overly harsh depictions of the Prussians, and the patriotic, freedom loving French characters who were liberated from German Occupation the year of its release.

Plot

In occupied France during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, a beautiful young laundress, Elizabeth Rousset (Simone Simon), shares a stage coach ride from Rouen with a group of condescending nobles and businessmen and their wives, a political firebrand named Jean Cornudet (John Emery) and a young priest on his way to his new assignment (Edmund Glover). When they stop for the night at a village controlled by Prussian Lieutenant von Eyrick, known to his fellow officers as "Mademoiselle Fifi" (Kurt Kreuger), their coach is held up until the laundress agrees to "dine" with the lieutenant. Unlike her social betters, who have all fraternized with the enemy, and had them as guests in their homes, Elizabeth is a simple patriot, and will not eat or consort with the invaders of her country, so the coach cannot go on. The group finally convinces her that it would be best for France for them to get on with their business, and she concedes. While she is closeted with the arrogant Prussian, whose aim is to humiliate and degrade her, the rest of the travellers celebrate their deliverance by getting drunk on champagne, and following the progress of the evening's encounter through the sounds coming from upstairs.

The next morning, when the coach departs with Lt. von Eyrick travelling with them all the travellers except Cornudet and the priest ostentatiously snub Elizabeth, while chatting and gossiping with the Prussian. At Cleresville, after Elizabeth, the priest and von Eyrick leave the coach, Cornudet is overcome by guilt at his previous actions, tells the group off and leaves to seek Elizabeth out. He tries to apologize to her, but she rejects him even so, she has stirred his patriotism again.

The young priest has taken over from the previous curé who defied the Prussians by refusing to ring the church bell, and he has decided to continue that defiance the bell will remain silent until the first blow is struck for the freedom of France. The Prussian Captain in charge of the village wants the French to submit to them, and ring the bell themselves ("We do not win," explains Lt. von Eyrick, "unless our opponents ring the bell"), but one of his subordinates has vowed that on his next patrol, he will ring the bell himself. Cornudet hears this, and prepares to protect the bell. That night, when the Prussians approach the church to ring the bell, he shoots and kills a lancer charging toward him on horseback.

Meanwhile, the bored Prussian officers have thrown themselves a party, and have rounded up women from the village to attend. Elizabeth feels she must go, as the Prussians threaten to withhold their business from her aunt's laundry unless she does and she is assured that "Mademoiselle Fifi" will not be at the party; but, of course, he is. When the lieutenant, drunk, slaps Elizabeth after insulting France and the French, she picks up a knife and stabs and kills him. Both now trying to escape from Prussians who are hunting them, Elizabeth and Cornudet are taken in by the priest, who hides them.

When the Prussians make arrangements with the priest for the funeral of Lt. von Eyrick, they ask that the bell be rung as is customary. The priest agrees, and the Prussians feel that they have won their battle. However, the priest explains later to Elizabeth and Cornudet that the bell can be rung now that the first blow for French freedom has been struck by a woman.

Cast

Production

Producer Val Lewton wanted to break out of producing horror films, and suggested that RKO make a period film based on the short stories of Guy de Maupassant, with Erich von Stroheim and Simone Simon. George Sanders was approached about playing Lieutenant Fifi.[2]

Prior to directing Mademoiselle Fifi, his first official solo directorial credit, film editor Robert Wise had directed retakes and additional sequences on The Magnificent Ambersons while Orson Welles was in South America, and had replaced director Gunther von Fritsch on Val Lewton's The Curse of the Cat People. His work on Cat People convinced Lewton to use him again on Fifi. Wise also directed The Body Snatcher for Lewton in 1945.[3]

Lewton and Wise studied hundreds of period paintings by artists such as Toulouse-Lautrec, Delacroix, Daumier and Detaille, to find the look they wanted. Wise later commented: "Because those were low-budget films, we had to stretch our imagination and get results without too much to work with. How we staged them, how we lit them, how we placed our camera was to get strong, effective results without having the material at hand."[3]

Mademoiselle Fifi was in production from 23 March through late April 1944 with the working title of "The Silent Bell".[4] Shooting took 22 days on a budget of $200,000 - a record low amount for an American costume drama in the sound era. Sets left over from RKO's 1939 film The Hunchback of Notre Dame were utilized, but because of the skimpy budget, cardboard sets were also used at some points.[3] The outdoor snow scenes were shot at Big Bear Lake, California.[5]

To improve her figure when filming, the French actress Simone Simon wore false breasts which she called "my eyes." Before each take, she would call out "Bring me my eyes!"[3]

It is unique for the time period, namely because the two main protagonists Elizabeth and Jean each unprovocatively kill a soldier. The Hays Code, which was strictly enforced at the time, was strict about portraying murderers in a negative light and it was typically uncommon for them to survive the end of the film, usually dying either through self-sacrificial atonement for their crime, or by being justifiably killed for it. However, both characters are portrayed as good and just, and both are alive, unrepentant and glorified for their deeds at the end of the film.[6] This can be attributed to the anti-German sentiment that was prevalent in American cinema during World War II. Films from that time often featured overt propaganda, especially in the German characters being portrayed as cruel, sadistic and godless, while the French(who were Americas allies) are depicted in two quite polarizing camps(usually in the same film); the negative depictions portray them as collaborators who openly fraternise with the occupiers(as Elizabeth's coworkers and coachmates do), and the protagonistic portrayal where they are depicted as good, uncompromising patriots who are being oppressed by their cruel occupiers, and are generally forced to stand up and fight for their beliefs.

The story also purposefully mimics the world as it was during this time, with the Prussian occupiers being a symbol of the then current German occupation of France, which was in its fourth year at the time, and would be liberated mere months after the release of the film.

Response

Unfortunately for Lewton's hopes for breaking out of the horror genre, Mademoiselle Fifi did not do well at previews, or at the box office once it was released, and was by far the worst grossing of Lewton's films.[2] Some critics, however, thought the film was well worth their while. James Agee wrote in The Nation:

I don't know of any American film which has tried to say as much, as pointedly, about the performance of the middle class in war. There is a gallant, fervent quality about the whole picture, faults and all, which gives it a peculiar kind of life and likeableness, and which signifies that there is one group of men working in Hollywood who have neither lost nor taken care to conceal the purity of their hope and intentions.[3]

Home video

Mademoiselle Fifi has so far only seen two official releases: a US VHS video by Warner Home Video and a French region 2 PAL DVD by Editions Montparnasse. It has also been issued on an authorised DVD by Manga Films, a Spanish pirate company.[7]

Notes

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