Les Perles de la Couronne


1h 40m 1937
Les Perles de la Couronne

Brief Synopsis

Seven pearls shape the destinies of all who possess them.

Film Details

Also Known As
Pearls of the Crown, Perles de la Couronne
Genre
Comedy
Historical
Release Date
1937
Production Company
Cineas

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 40m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Synopsis

Three narrators (French writer Jean Martin, an English royal equerry, and a papal chamberlain) tell the story of seven matched pearls, four of them now in the British Crown. Episodes whirl us from Pope Clement VII to Mary Queen of Scots, from whom the pearls are stolen while she's occupied with the headsman. Historic events are seasoned with sly, satiric humor, and famous beauties are portrayed by stunning actresses. Then the narrators meet, and decide to try tracing the three unrecovered pearls from 1587 to the present...

Film Details

Also Known As
Pearls of the Crown, Perles de la Couronne
Genre
Comedy
Historical
Release Date
1937
Production Company
Cineas

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 40m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Articles

The Pearls of the Crown (1937)


Released in 1937, the quasi-anthology The Pearls of the Crown (Les perles de la couronne) is the seventh narrative featured directed by Russian-born French filmmaker Sacha Guitry. Born Alexandre-Georges Guitry to an acting family, he first rose to fame as a playwright and often appeared on the stage in his own work.

Extremely prolific and able to shoot some films in only a matter of a few days, Guitry infused his famous wit in this film into a semi-historical template filled with lighthearted, inventive touches. In fact, Guitry himself assumes four roles - narrator Jean Martin, François I, Barras, and Napoleon III - for the chronicle of seven pearls, three of which have mysteriously disappeared after the others wind up on the crown of England. The origin of the gems as gifts to a young Catherine de Medici by Pope Clement VII turns into a springboard for four hundred years and hundreds of characters' worth of twists and turns including other familiar figures like Henry VIII and Mary, Queen of Scots.

Devoid of a central protagonist, the film instead works as a kind of picaresque journey through world history; in fact, it was originally intended to be shot in multiple languages, with its native French alternating with English and Italian. Unlike his previous films, this one had no basis in any of his plays and offers up a wide, cinematic canvas for him to explore unlike his most famous prior film, The Story of a Cheat (1936).

Among the many roles, two standouts for fans of French are found in the Abyssinia segment featuring Marcel Dalio, a veteran of productions like Jean Renoir's The Rules of the Game (1939) who went to Hollywood to appear in films like To Have and Have Not (1944) and Sabrina (1954), and Arletty, the iconic star of such films as Children of Paradise (1945) and Les Visiteurs du Soir (1942). However, none of their other features quite matched the tropical, politically incorrect spectacle on display here.

Released to great acclaim in the United States in 1938 by Lenauer International Films, the film was slightly trimmed of some of its more bawdy dialogue in order to receive a Production Seal with an MPAA certification awarded in July of that year. The film was a success in its native country as well and is often cited as a forerunner to Max Ophüls's The Earrings of Madame de... (1953), which also follows the ironic path of jewels but over a much shorter span of time.

As it turned out, fate would turn out to have a few surprises in store for Guitry as well when France was occupied by German forces during World War II. Rumors of collaboration turned into an accusation that took a toll on his health in a detention camp and destroyed his fourth marriage. Ultimately he was cleared of charges, but the resurrection of his career took some time with his reputation only fully restored in later years. It's a tale too wild to imagine even in a film as fanciful as this one.

By Nathaniel Thompson
The Pearls Of The Crown (1937)

The Pearls of the Crown (1937)

Released in 1937, the quasi-anthology The Pearls of the Crown (Les perles de la couronne) is the seventh narrative featured directed by Russian-born French filmmaker Sacha Guitry. Born Alexandre-Georges Guitry to an acting family, he first rose to fame as a playwright and often appeared on the stage in his own work. Extremely prolific and able to shoot some films in only a matter of a few days, Guitry infused his famous wit in this film into a semi-historical template filled with lighthearted, inventive touches. In fact, Guitry himself assumes four roles - narrator Jean Martin, François I, Barras, and Napoleon III - for the chronicle of seven pearls, three of which have mysteriously disappeared after the others wind up on the crown of England. The origin of the gems as gifts to a young Catherine de Medici by Pope Clement VII turns into a springboard for four hundred years and hundreds of characters' worth of twists and turns including other familiar figures like Henry VIII and Mary, Queen of Scots. Devoid of a central protagonist, the film instead works as a kind of picaresque journey through world history; in fact, it was originally intended to be shot in multiple languages, with its native French alternating with English and Italian. Unlike his previous films, this one had no basis in any of his plays and offers up a wide, cinematic canvas for him to explore unlike his most famous prior film, The Story of a Cheat (1936). Among the many roles, two standouts for fans of French are found in the Abyssinia segment featuring Marcel Dalio, a veteran of productions like Jean Renoir's The Rules of the Game (1939) who went to Hollywood to appear in films like To Have and Have Not (1944) and Sabrina (1954), and Arletty, the iconic star of such films as Children of Paradise (1945) and Les Visiteurs du Soir (1942). However, none of their other features quite matched the tropical, politically incorrect spectacle on display here. Released to great acclaim in the United States in 1938 by Lenauer International Films, the film was slightly trimmed of some of its more bawdy dialogue in order to receive a Production Seal with an MPAA certification awarded in July of that year. The film was a success in its native country as well and is often cited as a forerunner to Max Ophüls's The Earrings of Madame de... (1953), which also follows the ironic path of jewels but over a much shorter span of time. As it turned out, fate would turn out to have a few surprises in store for Guitry as well when France was occupied by German forces during World War II. Rumors of collaboration turned into an accusation that took a toll on his health in a detention camp and destroyed his fourth marriage. Ultimately he was cleared of charges, but the resurrection of his career took some time with his reputation only fully restored in later years. It's a tale too wild to imagine even in a film as fanciful as this one. By Nathaniel Thompson

Presenting Sacha Guitry - PRESENTING SACHA GUITRY - A 4-Disc Collection from Eclipse


It's no exaggeration to call Sacha Guitry the Noel Coward of France. On the contrary, it's an understatement. Playwright, artist, essayist, screenwriter, film director, theatrical impresario, star of stage and screen and all around bon vivant and cultural wit, Guitry was one of the most famous--and prolific--artistic personalities in France between the World Wars. And yet, after directing and starring in more than 30 features between 1935 and 1957, his legacy is practically unknown in the United States, even to film buffs and Francophiles, in part because he never dabbled in Hollywood like fellow stars Maurice Chevalier and Charles Boyer and Jean Gabin, in part because his witty French confections didn't travel stateside. Presenting Sacha Guitry, a four-disc set from Eclipse (the budget-minded imprint from Criterion), reveals just how creative, innovative and clever a filmmaker he was. Consider it a reintroduction to one of the most important and influential French filmmakers of the thirties.

Guitry came to cinema from the theater, where his witty plays were the toast of the town and his man of the world/man about town performances made him the very model of continental sophistication. Initially dismissive of film, he resigned himself to the movies as a way of bringing his plays to a wider audience. The Story of a Cheat (1936), adapted from his only published novel, was not his first film but it was the first to leave behind the stiff theatrical style of his earlier stage adaptations and take on the new artform on its own terms. Framed by Guitry as the titular cheat scribbling his memoirs in an outdoor café, the film is a series of flashbacks with the writer/director/actor's droll narration as its sole soundtrack. The running commentary offers a tongue-in-cheek defense of his life of crime as the inevitable outcome of his unique education in the school of life and self-effacing insights to the skewed moral metaphysics ("What have I done to the Lord that people constantly solicit me to engage in crime?") of a reluctant scoundrel turned professional cheat. The invention begins in the opening credits, a visual introduction to the cast with Guitry's playful narration acknowledging the contrivances of this brand of cinematic theater, and is carried through the entire unconventional project.

If Guitry is not particularly cinematic in the visual sense--his images are literal and often flatly staged, shot as if against a theatrical backdrop--his sophisticated approach to storytelling and point-of-view is a revelation. He uses optical wipes, stop-motion and fast-motion techniques and cuts scenes at a furious clip, yet his narration makes it all seem to unfold at the leisurely pace of a conversation. His technique is so smooth that you barely notice the mechanics, even as he satirizes and plays with film conventions and expectations. When he finally steps in to the role of the mature Cheat, taking over from his younger incarnation, he gives himself a magnificent entrance: he shaves off a bushy beard grown by the young version of himself and reveals the change of actor, reacting to the new face with a droll comment and a wink at the audience. The filter of his commentary frames the action, deftly played out as snappy silent movie sequences with narration in the place of intertitles (he even provides the dialogue for the characters miming his remembrances), as a kind of self-indulgent tall tale from a man romanticizing a misspent life into an unbelievable adventure of incredible twists, unlikely opportunities and ironic turns of fortune which, when all is confessed, just may be true after all.

The Pearls of the Crown (1937), one of Guitry's rare original scripts (written in collaboration with the prolific Christian-Jaque, of Fanfan la Tulipe fame), is an even more intricately cut gem, an epic in miniature with a whimsical sensibility. The tale (the result of "scrupulous research and wholesale invention" the credits helpfully inform us) bounces through history and around the globe to trace the journeys of seven perfect pearls given to Catherine de Medici by Pope Clemet VII as they change hands over the centuries. Written to commemorate the coronation of King George VI of England, it was also an effectively trilingual film, a story told in French, English and Italian, the languages often ricocheting off one another in some cleverly designed scenes that play out without the need of subtitles. Guitry plays no less then four roles (of an estimated two-hundred character who wind through the sprawling narrative) in this rapidly-paced pageant of royal pacts, diplomatic deals and amorous asides, but his primary role is that of raconteur. He's an accidental detective who recounts this intricate tale to his wife (Jacqueline Delubac, Guitry's real-life wife at the time) and teams up with searchers from Britain and Italy to trace the three pearls still unaccounted for.

Guitry teases the audience with its tongue-in-cheek storytelling and droll self-awareness as he takes us behind the scenes of throne room politics and plotting and romantic shenanigans and his whimsical episodes and delightful commentaries are never less than inspired. Arletty stars in the film's most outrageous scene, playing an exotic princess in bizarre blackface who speaks in an decipherable language created by running the soundtrack backwards.

Désiré (1937), adapted by Guitry from his stage success, is a more conventional offering in the Noel Coward mode of elegant sex comedy. The usually aristocratic Guitry dresses down to play the title character, an elegantly professional and worldly valet with the habit of seducing his female employers. As such practices result in short-lived positions, he is determined to hold on to his new position as valet to a Odette (Jacqueline Delubac again), the kept mistress of an insufferable politician (Jacque Baumer), by resisting temptation. As a tour through the dreams of Désiré and Odette illustrate, temptation exerts a strong hold on both of them. Arletty co-star as the far-less uptight maid, who enjoys the chaos that the unresolved attractions unleashes across the social divide.

Restricted largely to the various manor homes of the mistress, this is much more of a filmed theater piece than the previous films, directed at a measured pace that focuses on the banter and verbal by-play of the characters and the upstairs/downstairs comedy of the situation. But it is also full of winking asides, clever innuendo and knowing characters with healthy sexual appetites. The wit and wily performances are the attractions of this film.

As the title suggests, Quadrille (1938) adds a leg to the romantic triangle to get a... well, romantic rectangle doesn't have the same ring to it, but it's better than square or triangle. Guitry is a sophisticated newspaper editor in a six-year romance with a stage actress (Gaby Morlay). Jacqueline Delubac is a freelance reporter who on the trail of the same story: an interview with an American movie star (Georges Grey) on a whirlwind tour of Europe. While the editor takes the opportunity to ask his respected (and quite lovely) colleague her advice on proposing to his long-time "live-in lover," the American is busy seducing her. It has a marvelously continental attitude toward sex and romance and the champagne dialogue that made Guitry famous on the stage ("A man doesn't cheat on his mistress," he muses while pondering his proposal). Guitry may not have the momentum of Lubitsch when it comes to the elegant sex comedy, but he is just as sophisticated and his characters are all worldly consenting adults who discuss sex in wittily frank exchanges that, even couched in metaphors and double entendres, wouldn't have passed American censors of the thirties.

As wonderful as his words are, the performances carry the film, especially the weary resignation of Guitry as when he faces his lover's infidelity. There's almost a sense of relief beneath the stab of betrayal and he negotiates their break-up like a performance designed to save face in public while Delubac works behind the scenes attempting to reunite the couple. Like Désiré, it's an adaptation of a stage hit, but this is a snappier film, with deft crosscutting between the couples and more fluid dialogue scenes. In true Guitry form, the happy ending is not complete without a wryly cynical aside that reminds us of the rarified world that may only exist in Guitry's romantically cynical sensibility but blossoms in each of his films.

Presenting Sacha Guitry reveals Guitry as a true auteur: his intricate narratives are endlessly inventive and creatively applied and his writing sparkles with comic invention, droll wit and continental sophistication. And as a leading man, he's a model of easy elegance and knowing experience, a man of the world who accepts the essential absurdity of modern life with a wry smile and sense of challenge. Like all releases from the budget-minded Eclipse imprint, there are no supplements to this set but for well-written and informative notes on each film by Michael Koresky. The films themselves, presented in a windowboxed format, are well mastered from generally strong prints and (but for brief moments or minor wear or damage) look and sound excellent for films over 70 years old. These films were previously released in France as part of an eight-disc set of Guitry productions. That offers some hope of a follow-up set some time in the future. On the basis of these films, Guitry is a director worthy of further research.

For more information about Presenting Sacha Guitry, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Presenting Sacha Guitry, go to TC M Shopping.

by Sean Axmaker

Presenting Sacha Guitry - PRESENTING SACHA GUITRY - A 4-Disc Collection from Eclipse

It's no exaggeration to call Sacha Guitry the Noel Coward of France. On the contrary, it's an understatement. Playwright, artist, essayist, screenwriter, film director, theatrical impresario, star of stage and screen and all around bon vivant and cultural wit, Guitry was one of the most famous--and prolific--artistic personalities in France between the World Wars. And yet, after directing and starring in more than 30 features between 1935 and 1957, his legacy is practically unknown in the United States, even to film buffs and Francophiles, in part because he never dabbled in Hollywood like fellow stars Maurice Chevalier and Charles Boyer and Jean Gabin, in part because his witty French confections didn't travel stateside. Presenting Sacha Guitry, a four-disc set from Eclipse (the budget-minded imprint from Criterion), reveals just how creative, innovative and clever a filmmaker he was. Consider it a reintroduction to one of the most important and influential French filmmakers of the thirties. Guitry came to cinema from the theater, where his witty plays were the toast of the town and his man of the world/man about town performances made him the very model of continental sophistication. Initially dismissive of film, he resigned himself to the movies as a way of bringing his plays to a wider audience. The Story of a Cheat (1936), adapted from his only published novel, was not his first film but it was the first to leave behind the stiff theatrical style of his earlier stage adaptations and take on the new artform on its own terms. Framed by Guitry as the titular cheat scribbling his memoirs in an outdoor café, the film is a series of flashbacks with the writer/director/actor's droll narration as its sole soundtrack. The running commentary offers a tongue-in-cheek defense of his life of crime as the inevitable outcome of his unique education in the school of life and self-effacing insights to the skewed moral metaphysics ("What have I done to the Lord that people constantly solicit me to engage in crime?") of a reluctant scoundrel turned professional cheat. The invention begins in the opening credits, a visual introduction to the cast with Guitry's playful narration acknowledging the contrivances of this brand of cinematic theater, and is carried through the entire unconventional project. If Guitry is not particularly cinematic in the visual sense--his images are literal and often flatly staged, shot as if against a theatrical backdrop--his sophisticated approach to storytelling and point-of-view is a revelation. He uses optical wipes, stop-motion and fast-motion techniques and cuts scenes at a furious clip, yet his narration makes it all seem to unfold at the leisurely pace of a conversation. His technique is so smooth that you barely notice the mechanics, even as he satirizes and plays with film conventions and expectations. When he finally steps in to the role of the mature Cheat, taking over from his younger incarnation, he gives himself a magnificent entrance: he shaves off a bushy beard grown by the young version of himself and reveals the change of actor, reacting to the new face with a droll comment and a wink at the audience. The filter of his commentary frames the action, deftly played out as snappy silent movie sequences with narration in the place of intertitles (he even provides the dialogue for the characters miming his remembrances), as a kind of self-indulgent tall tale from a man romanticizing a misspent life into an unbelievable adventure of incredible twists, unlikely opportunities and ironic turns of fortune which, when all is confessed, just may be true after all. The Pearls of the Crown (1937), one of Guitry's rare original scripts (written in collaboration with the prolific Christian-Jaque, of Fanfan la Tulipe fame), is an even more intricately cut gem, an epic in miniature with a whimsical sensibility. The tale (the result of "scrupulous research and wholesale invention" the credits helpfully inform us) bounces through history and around the globe to trace the journeys of seven perfect pearls given to Catherine de Medici by Pope Clemet VII as they change hands over the centuries. Written to commemorate the coronation of King George VI of England, it was also an effectively trilingual film, a story told in French, English and Italian, the languages often ricocheting off one another in some cleverly designed scenes that play out without the need of subtitles. Guitry plays no less then four roles (of an estimated two-hundred character who wind through the sprawling narrative) in this rapidly-paced pageant of royal pacts, diplomatic deals and amorous asides, but his primary role is that of raconteur. He's an accidental detective who recounts this intricate tale to his wife (Jacqueline Delubac, Guitry's real-life wife at the time) and teams up with searchers from Britain and Italy to trace the three pearls still unaccounted for. Guitry teases the audience with its tongue-in-cheek storytelling and droll self-awareness as he takes us behind the scenes of throne room politics and plotting and romantic shenanigans and his whimsical episodes and delightful commentaries are never less than inspired. Arletty stars in the film's most outrageous scene, playing an exotic princess in bizarre blackface who speaks in an decipherable language created by running the soundtrack backwards. Désiré (1937), adapted by Guitry from his stage success, is a more conventional offering in the Noel Coward mode of elegant sex comedy. The usually aristocratic Guitry dresses down to play the title character, an elegantly professional and worldly valet with the habit of seducing his female employers. As such practices result in short-lived positions, he is determined to hold on to his new position as valet to a Odette (Jacqueline Delubac again), the kept mistress of an insufferable politician (Jacque Baumer), by resisting temptation. As a tour through the dreams of Désiré and Odette illustrate, temptation exerts a strong hold on both of them. Arletty co-star as the far-less uptight maid, who enjoys the chaos that the unresolved attractions unleashes across the social divide. Restricted largely to the various manor homes of the mistress, this is much more of a filmed theater piece than the previous films, directed at a measured pace that focuses on the banter and verbal by-play of the characters and the upstairs/downstairs comedy of the situation. But it is also full of winking asides, clever innuendo and knowing characters with healthy sexual appetites. The wit and wily performances are the attractions of this film. As the title suggests, Quadrille (1938) adds a leg to the romantic triangle to get a... well, romantic rectangle doesn't have the same ring to it, but it's better than square or triangle. Guitry is a sophisticated newspaper editor in a six-year romance with a stage actress (Gaby Morlay). Jacqueline Delubac is a freelance reporter who on the trail of the same story: an interview with an American movie star (Georges Grey) on a whirlwind tour of Europe. While the editor takes the opportunity to ask his respected (and quite lovely) colleague her advice on proposing to his long-time "live-in lover," the American is busy seducing her. It has a marvelously continental attitude toward sex and romance and the champagne dialogue that made Guitry famous on the stage ("A man doesn't cheat on his mistress," he muses while pondering his proposal). Guitry may not have the momentum of Lubitsch when it comes to the elegant sex comedy, but he is just as sophisticated and his characters are all worldly consenting adults who discuss sex in wittily frank exchanges that, even couched in metaphors and double entendres, wouldn't have passed American censors of the thirties. As wonderful as his words are, the performances carry the film, especially the weary resignation of Guitry as when he faces his lover's infidelity. There's almost a sense of relief beneath the stab of betrayal and he negotiates their break-up like a performance designed to save face in public while Delubac works behind the scenes attempting to reunite the couple. Like Désiré, it's an adaptation of a stage hit, but this is a snappier film, with deft crosscutting between the couples and more fluid dialogue scenes. In true Guitry form, the happy ending is not complete without a wryly cynical aside that reminds us of the rarified world that may only exist in Guitry's romantically cynical sensibility but blossoms in each of his films. Presenting Sacha Guitry reveals Guitry as a true auteur: his intricate narratives are endlessly inventive and creatively applied and his writing sparkles with comic invention, droll wit and continental sophistication. And as a leading man, he's a model of easy elegance and knowing experience, a man of the world who accepts the essential absurdity of modern life with a wry smile and sense of challenge. Like all releases from the budget-minded Eclipse imprint, there are no supplements to this set but for well-written and informative notes on each film by Michael Koresky. The films themselves, presented in a windowboxed format, are well mastered from generally strong prints and (but for brief moments or minor wear or damage) look and sound excellent for films over 70 years old. These films were previously released in France as part of an eight-disc set of Guitry productions. That offers some hope of a follow-up set some time in the future. On the basis of these films, Guitry is a director worthy of further research. For more information about Presenting Sacha Guitry, visit The Criterion Collection. To order Presenting Sacha Guitry, go to TC M Shopping. by Sean Axmaker

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