The very first Postman
- Ann Harding
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The very first Postman
I am sure few of you are aware of the very first film version of James M. Cain's The Postman Always Rings Twice. I was made in France in 1939. It's a brilliant picture.
Le Dernier Tournant (The last turn, 1939) by Pierre Chenal with Michel Simon, Fernand Gravey and Corinne Luchaire
Top, Nick (M. Simon) and Frank (F. Gravey); bottom, Cora (C. Luchaire)
The story line - while transposed to the South of France where Nick (Michel Simon) runs a small restaurant & petrol station on small road - is extremely faithful to Cain's novel. Cora is played by the very young 19-year old Corinne Luchaire who was a shooting star in French cinema. She died at 28 of TB. The film has a very dry aspect; not as much glamour as the later 1946 version. It's totally faithful in that respect to Cain. Cora and Frank want to get rid of Nick in perfect cold-blood. This is a Film Noir before the genre was even invented: the moody cinematography with claustrophobic close-ups, the isolation of the petrol station surrounded by an arid landscape, the doomed hero and heroine. Michel Simon is perfect as the cuckold husband, probably not quite as blind as he appears to be. Fernand Gravey, who worked in Hollywood for a while, is also perfectly cast -against type- as the drifter Frank obsessed with Cora. And finally, Corinne Luchaire is the cold-blooded Cora, showing strength as well as frailty. She is long, thin and a bit boyish in a way. She wears a black-wig in the film as she was blond. A film that deserved to be better known.
In 1942, another version of Postman was made by Luchino Visconti, Ossessione.
Le Dernier Tournant (The last turn, 1939) by Pierre Chenal with Michel Simon, Fernand Gravey and Corinne Luchaire
Top, Nick (M. Simon) and Frank (F. Gravey); bottom, Cora (C. Luchaire)
The story line - while transposed to the South of France where Nick (Michel Simon) runs a small restaurant & petrol station on small road - is extremely faithful to Cain's novel. Cora is played by the very young 19-year old Corinne Luchaire who was a shooting star in French cinema. She died at 28 of TB. The film has a very dry aspect; not as much glamour as the later 1946 version. It's totally faithful in that respect to Cain. Cora and Frank want to get rid of Nick in perfect cold-blood. This is a Film Noir before the genre was even invented: the moody cinematography with claustrophobic close-ups, the isolation of the petrol station surrounded by an arid landscape, the doomed hero and heroine. Michel Simon is perfect as the cuckold husband, probably not quite as blind as he appears to be. Fernand Gravey, who worked in Hollywood for a while, is also perfectly cast -against type- as the drifter Frank obsessed with Cora. And finally, Corinne Luchaire is the cold-blooded Cora, showing strength as well as frailty. She is long, thin and a bit boyish in a way. She wears a black-wig in the film as she was blond. A film that deserved to be better known.
In 1942, another version of Postman was made by Luchino Visconti, Ossessione.
Last edited by Ann Harding on February 9th, 2009, 4:22 am, edited 2 times in total.
Wow, thanks for posting this, Christine! I don't know that film at all, but would certainly like to. I'm a big fan of Visconit's version but find the 1946 American version made by Tay Garnett to be perfectly awful; one of the dullest noir films ever made.
Do you happen to know if a Region One DVD has ever been produced of Le Dernier Tourant?
Thanks again!
Do you happen to know if a Region One DVD has ever been produced of Le Dernier Tourant?
Thanks again!
- Ann Harding
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Re: The very first Postman
Is Fernand Gravey the same man as "Fernand Gravet" who played Strauss in the MGM magnum opus musical The Great Waltz? Thanks Ann, I've enjoyed Visconti's version, but had no idea there was an earlier version.Ann Harding wrote:Le Dernier Tournant (The last turn, 1939) by Pierre Chenal with Michel Simon, Fernand Gravey and Corinne Luchaire
- Ann Harding
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