When At First You Practice To Deceive-Max Ophuls’ The
Earrings Of Madame de… (1953)
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
The Earrings Of Madame de, starring Charles Boyer, Daniele
Darrieux, Vittorio Desica, directed by Max Ophuls, 1953
There are plenty of things that films, especially older
films can do to portray various aspects of the lives of people who have
inhabited this wicked old world. The film under review, Max Ophuls’ The Earrings of Madame de… is almost a perfect
expression of the Belle Epoque, the period of peace and stability for the upper
crust before the ugly storm of World War I washed away all such illusions that
the industrial age would bring unencumbered
progress and benefits to the Western world. To show rather graphically how
the ill-thought out consequences of the moral decay of the period would bring
the flower of the European youth to its knees before that conflict was over. At
another level this film, for those who want to shy away from the political
storms, represents an exceptional example of a master filmmaker at work using
one simple thread to tell his story, to tell of the consequences of what the
headline to this review points out-when you first practice to deceive-watch out
for the blowback.
For those who want to accept the film for its latter view
here is how things came to such a nasty personal end. Madame de (and the beauty
of this film other than as an example of the decadent French aristocracy is we
never learn, never need to learn really the rest of Madame’s surname-a
brilliant stroke), played by Daniele Darrieux, a big star of the French cinema
in the post-World War II period, a flighty and self-indulgent wife of a count
and General in the French Army, played by Charles Boyer, in the post-Paris
Commune period was in hock up to her pretty eyebrows to a party (or parties)
unknown. To get out from under dear Madame had hocked an expensive pair of
earrings that the good General had given her as a heartfelt wedding gift. From
there it is a question of following the bouncing ball, following the trail of
the earrings and what they mean to the receivers in various contexts.
Obviously to Madame they did not mean much in that stage of
her marriage (she had plenty of other hock-able goods around her boudoir) since she hocked them and then made up an
outrageous story about losing them at the opera. Wrong move. Once the “theft” became
public the jeweler who Madame hocked the jewels to got cold feet and sold them to
the stiff upper-lipped general a second time. The General, in turn, used them
as bait in his rush to get rid of an inconvenient mistress that he had tired of
whom he was sending off to Turkey. She, in turn, hocked then when she got in
over her head in gambling debts in some Kasbah casino. They were subsequently purchased
by a Baron, played by Vittorio DeSica, who was on the way to Paris to take up a
diplomatic post. Are you still with me?
This is where things got dicey. The Baron met and was enchanted
by Madame who used every coquettish trick in the book to entice him, and to discard
him like an old shoe. Eventually they do become lovers and as a token of that
love the kindly Baron gives Madame, you guessed it, the earrings. Problem: she
can’t wear the things as a sign of her love for the Baron since the game would
be up with the General. So the hair-brained Madame “finds” the missing jewels.
Oops. The general already suspicious took the “found” jewels from Madame and
confronted the Baron with the truth of Madame’s lies. Get this though. He wanted
the Baron to sell them to the now obviously seriously wealthy jeweler so he could
buy them a third time and present them yet again to Madame. Meanwhile the Baron
seeing what the real picture was bowed, out of the scene. All very civilized,
civilized indeed.
Done, right. Are you kidding. The irate General gave them to
Madame but told her to give them to a niece who has just given birth to a child.
She, the niece, in turn, sold those freaking earrings to the now over the top
rich jeweler to pay off hubby’s debts. The reckless if wealthy jeweler tried to
sell them to the General a fourth time but he balked on this one. Madame
stepped up to purchase them though after hocking some goods that she could have
hocked to begin with. That purchase, that final purchase (at least in the film)
was the tripping point for the General knowing that Madame was purchasing the
jewels back out of devotion to the Baron. The General decided to confront the
Baron with his indiscretions with Madame, with his wife. Such matters of honor
were then settled in a very civilized way-divorce court. No, no on the field of
honor among gentlemen-a duel. The Baron was doomed but would not back down. As
a token trying to save the Baron through some miracle Madame placed the earring
as a donation at her church. No go. The Baron caught the westbound train, was
killed by the General’s single well-placed bullet. Madame, well, Madame, began
to fall apart as usual when any slight or grand thing laid her low. A great
film which you really must watch when you get a chance. And remember the moral
too.
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