Aboard a luxury transatlantic liner on which she has set sail with her husband, the mixed-race Daïnah flaunts her exotic and provocative charms. One evening, on the deserted deck, she amuses herself by flirting with one of the ship's engineers and then pushes him away, biting him ferociously. The following day, Daïnah is found to have disappeared overboard. The inquiry progresses very slowly but the husband, guessing at the truth of what happened, takes justice into his own hands.
A film by Jean Grémillon
France, 1931, Fiction, 44', language French
cast Laurence Clavius, Habib Benglia, Charles Vanel, Gaston Dubosc, Lucien Guérard, Gabrielle Fontane Maryanne
from the short story with the same name by
Pierre Daye
screenplay: Charles Spaak
screenplay: Jacques Lafitte
cinemtaographer: Louis Page
, Georges Périnal
sound: R. Bocquel
first assistant director: Jacques Brillouin
, Henri Storck
CRITIC'S NOTES
At first sight the subject of Daïnah la métisse, its pretext, has nothing that might cause concerns for its producers. But in the way it was conceived by its director and the screenwriter Charles Spaak, the film set out to achieve an objective that went well beyond the bare bones of a melodrama centered on racial jealousy and exoticism, as was the fashion of the times. It aimed to present a "marine," a typical term in painting, in which a luxury liner sailing towards remote shores, the mildness of the South Seas, the night and the contrast between the scorching hold and the grand saloons in which the privileged passengers lead an existence ignorant of contemptible human passions, are blended to the syncopated notes of jazz, composing a sort of poem rather than a strictly dramatic work. The boldness is tangible and in step with the long shots of the sea at night, the theft of a white shoe that symbolizes an unavowable crime of passion, and the use of surreal masks in a magic show dominated by the presence of a dagger and the killing of a dove. Once again, distributors and producers detested a film that would be taken to pieces after it was made and reduced to less than an hour in length.
To get a better understanding of the difficulties faced by the great French directors of the time in creating their works in the early years of sound the rushes of Jean Vigo's Zéro de conduite (1933, 15') will be given their world première: fascinating rediscovered images (with Vigo on set), that allow us to identify new details of another film heavily influenced by the worries of the production.
restoration (in 2017) curated by Gaumont
with the support of Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée
film laboratory L'Immagine Ritrovata (Parigi e Bologna)
2017 | 74th Venice FilmFest, Italy
* Selection - Venice Classics
* Projection / Screening: 8 September 2017, 17:30, Sala Casinò
www.labiennale.org/en/cinema/2017/program-cinema-2017/jean-gr%C3%A9millon-da%C3%AFnah-la-m%C3%A9tisse-0