The Marriage of Ramuntcho

The Marriage of Ramuntcho (French: Le mariage de Ramuntcho) is a 1947 French comedy film directed by Max de Vaucorbeil and starring Gaby Sylvia, André Dassary and Frank Villard.[2] It is often considered to be the first French feature using modern color photography.[3]

The Marriage of Ramuntcho
Directed byMax de Vaucorbeil
Written by
Produced byPaul Dutournier
Starring
CinematographyRaymond Clunie
Edited byHenri Taverna
Music byMarc Lanjean
Production
company
Films de France
Distributed byDistribution Parisienne de Films (Paris)
Various (provinces)[1]
Release date
  • 9 April 1946 (1946-04-09)
(Biarritz)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Cast

edit

Precursors

edit

Attempts at natural color filmmaking were few and far between in France before the 1950s. The seldom used Keller-Dorian system employed a proprietary additive film stock so complex that making copies of it was impossible. Francita Color, another additive process, was more practical but low fidelity. During German occupation, a few animated shorts made with imported Agfacolor stock pioneered subtractive color in the country, but no feature or live action film had yet been shot using this technology.[3]

Production

edit

Development

edit

In early 1946, Alice Charles, manager of Films de France, a documentary and news specialist, announced that she was moving her offices to the headquarters of distributor Distribution Parisienne de Film (D.P.F.), as her company was looking to branch out into features with the support of new D.P.F. boss Henry de Saint-Girons.[4] The Marriage of Ramuntcho was the first of a two-picture slate announced in mid-April 1946 by Films de France. The second was a biopic of Count Cagliostro to be directed by Robert Péguy.[5]

Both movies were hurried into production to capitalize on the discovery of unused Agfacolor reels left by the Germans at Éclair following their defeat. Producer Paul Dutournier chose to film Pierre Loti's novel Ramuntcho, largely from practical reasons: the story was set in his home region of the Basque Country, and he had already participated in another adaptation of the same novel before the war. He entrusted the film's story treatment to his friend, Basque novelist Pierre Aspétéguy.[6]

Pre-production

edit

A color photography specialist named Hongrand was brought in from Belgium to assist the French crew, which had no experience with the medium, and a test session was organized between late April and early May in Sare, a location of the previous Ramuntcho adaptation.[6] Films de France was also out of its depth on the administrative side. The project's provisional budget was not balanced, which caused it to be turned down for public subsidies, before an appeal brought belated relief as the shoot was already underway.[7]

Filming

edit

Principal photography started in mid-July 1946.[8] Various Basque performance groups, such as a dance troupe from Bidarray, were featured in the film.[9] Supposedly, Dutournier enlisted the assistance of real smugglers working the Franco-Spanish border.[6] Exterior filming in the Basque Country was marred by bad weather. Moreover, a significant part of the available stock had degraded significantly, barely leaving enough to complete the feature.[3][9] The worse reels were reserved for night scenes in an effort to mitigate the problem.[3]

Much of the film, however, was shot at the Victorine Studios in Nice, where the expensive recreation of a Basque public square pushed it further into the red. On August 1, Alice Charles and Henry de Saint-Girons jointly resigned from their respective positions at the head of Films de France and D.P.F.[10] As it was now viewed as a showpiece for the French film industry, the venture was bailed out by additional government credits and advances on receipts from distributors.[7][11] Production documents suggest that filming did not wrap up until October.[11]

Post-production

edit

Post-production was further hampered by the scarcity of Agfacolor material. Films de France, now steered by Gaby Silvia's businessman husband fr:Paul Annet Badel,[11] had to resort to unusual means to obtain more, such as exchanging it against other stock with the Soviet armed forces, and buying trims sold on the side by G.I.s stationed in the country.[12]

Release

edit

Billed as "The first French color film", The Marriage of Ramuntcho held its premiere gala at the Biarritz Casino on 9 April 1946, and a train car's worth of Parisian critics was convoyed to the Southern city for the occasion.[3][9] The German Agfacolor process was rebranded as "Franco-Agfacolor" in promotional material.[1] Thanks to its novelty, the picture was rather successful in Paris, where its original three-week engagement at the Gaumont-Palace and the Grand Rex was extended by an additional week.[3] However, Films de France could not satisfy the demand for more copies due to the scarcity of color film stock, bringing the picture's box office tally to a screeching halt.[7]

Those technical limitations also hindered international distribution. Five Ocean Film Company, an English sales outfit, commissioned a dubbed version called The Singing Smuggler from Rayant Pictures of Wembley, but faced difficulties selling it due to the poor print they had been provided.[7][13] The movie was nonetheless purchased for the U.S. by Globe Film Distribution, a recently formed company from the owners of the Irving Place and City Theatres.[14]: 15 

Reception

edit

Mainstream press

edit

A critic for Parisian cultural weekly Gavroche delivered an encouraging review, conceding that The Marriage of Ramuntcho "should be judged less like a movie and more like an outstanding achievement" as "[c]ompared to America, England, Russia, we only had the good will of a few men" to pioneer color filmmaking. Yet she credited "a beautiful love story" and insisted that the film's colors were less garish that those displayed by Technicolor.[9] Patriotism was not enough to ingratiate the film with other critics, however. Les Lettres françaises derided the "cruel technical inexperience" of the cinematographer and editor, as well as "the story's inanity" and "subpar actors". La Défense complained that "whether in color or in black and white, there is a silliness threshold that should not be crossed" and added that the director "did not make the film for the sake of colors but the sake of being first". Combat joked that "André Hugon's The Three Masks was the first French spoken film. There is still hope, then, for the future of color films after seeing The Marriage of Ramuntcho".[3]

Trade press

edit

In a capsule review directed at industry professionals, American trade magazine Variety called the film "sure box office for all Latin countries".[14]: 16  British counterpart Kinetograph Weekly praised the film's "pictorial values" but deemed that it was "handicapped by [its] frivolous subject".[15]

Audience

edit

In a consumer study conducted by Gaumont at their Gaumont-Palace location in Paris, patrons named The Marriage of Ramuntcho as their favorite French film of the year, although it lagged behind four American imports.[16]

Legacy

edit

While a second color feature titled Cagliostro was meant to be shot soon after Ramuntcho, all the available reels were used on the former, and the latter was quickly downgraded to a standard black and white production. However, the embattled Films de France never actually made it or any other full-length fiction work.[17] France's next color feature, 1948's The Pretty Miller Girl, actually reverted to an additive method, the short-lived Rouxcolor.[18] Modern, subtractive color films became commonplace in the country around 1950, through the use of the Belgian Gevacolor system.[19]

Bibliography

edit
  • Crisp, C.G. The Classic French Cinema, 1930–1960. Indiana University Press, 1993.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Le Marriage de Ramuntcho (film poster) (in French), Films de France, 1946
  2. ^ Crisp p.138
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Philip, Greg (11 April 2020). "Le mariage de Ramuntcho". filmperdu.fr. Et la couleur fut: Les 'premiers' films français en couleur (3e partie) (in French). Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  4. ^ A. Toé. (13 April 1946). "Les Films de France vont produire de grands films distribués par la D.P.F." La Cinématographie française. No. 1140. Paris. p. 2.
  5. ^ L.O. (13 April 1946). "'Les Films de France' vont produire en couleurs 'Ramuntcho' et 'Cagliostro'". La Cinématographie française. No. 1152. Paris. p. 13.
  6. ^ a b c M.P. (18 May 1946). "'Le Marriage de Ramuntcho' sera tourné à Sare en Juillet". Journal de Biarritz et de la Côte Basque (in French). p. 2.
  7. ^ a b c d Berthet, Frédérique (2011). "Le marriage de Ramuntcho : un laboratoire pilote pour les films couleurs après-guerre". cinematheque.fr (in French). Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  8. ^ "Le carnet du figurant". Cinévie. No. 46. Paris. 16 July 1946. p. 8.
  9. ^ a b c d Dorée, Dominique (April 17, 1947). "Première mondiale du Mariage de Ramuntcho". Gavroche. No. 134. Paris. p. 9.
  10. ^ L. d'H. (September 1946). "Démissions". Le Cinéopse. No. 247. Paris. p. 8.
  11. ^ a b c "Le mariage de Ramuntcho". Registres du cinéma et de l’audiovisuel, File: Oeuvre n°4909. Paris: Centre National de la Cinématographie.
  12. ^ "French in Hunt for Tint Stock". Variety. New York. January 22, 1947. p. 14.
  13. ^ Kinematograph Year Book. London: Odhams Press. 1949. p. 204.
  14. ^ a b "N.Y. Exhibs Form Foreign Import Firm, French Pic, 'Ramuntcho', First Product". Variety. New York. 17 September 1947.
  15. ^ Billings, Josh (12 January 1950). "Reviews for Showmen". Kinetograph Weekly. London. p. 22.
  16. ^ Smoodin, Eric (2020). Paris in the Dark: Going to the Movies in the City of Light, 1930–1950. Durham: Duke University Press. pp. 148–149. ISBN 9781478006114.
  17. ^ L.O. (25 May 1946). "Les Films de France préparent deux grandes productions". La Cinématographie française. No. 1158. Paris. p. 10.
  18. ^ James, Michael (24 November 1948). "New Film Color Process Unveiled in France At Premiere of Story About Franz Schubert". New York Times. p.  – via newspapers.com (subscription required) .
  19. ^ "Le cinéma des années 50 : en attendant Godard". moncinemaamoi.blog (in French). 9 October 2016. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
edit