Les ailes blanches (1943) Poster

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White wings, purple melodrama
kinsayder1 September 2010
In 1942 Jean Stelli had a huge success with the weepie "Le Voile bleu". It starred Gaby Morlay as a nanny who, having lost her own child, devotes her life to the children of others. Even today, the final scene can induce moisture in uncynical eyes.

In 1943 Robert Péguy tried to repeat that success with "Les Ailes blanches". It stars Gaby Morlay as a nun who, having lost her only love, devotes her life to helping other desperate women. We learn of Sister Claire's story in a flashback, while she's pondering the case of a pregnant girl who's been abandoned by her lover and rejected by her father (Saturnin Fabre).

The film did not achieve the success of "Le Voile bleu" and it's not hard to see why. The two plots - the frame story and the flashback - are hackneyed melodramas without even the compensation of a tearjerker ending. 50-year-old Gaby Morlay, who had been so moving as the selfless nanny in the earlier film, gives an arid performance as the elderly nun, and an unconvincing one as her teenage self, squeezed into party frocks and giant bows.

I found myself foraging for whatever morsels I could find in this unappetising pudding. One such morsel is Saturnin Fabre, a splendidly old-fashioned and over-the-top character actor who is continually swerving between broad comedy and high tragedy, and occasionally achieving both at the same time. Whenever my interest started to flag, they would wheel on Saturnin Fabre for another scene and all would be well.

Another tasty morsel, but at the opposite end of the dramatic register from Saturnin Fabre, is Jacqueline Bouvier. She gives such a fresh, lively, modern performance in this (her second) film, it's as if she's tumbled backwards out of a swinging fifties movie. I particularly enjoyed the part where she appears bare-legged in a showgirl costume. Those scenes had great technical merit, I thought.

Mademoiselle Bouvier later became Madame Marcel Pagnol. She starred in several of her husband's films, all of which are better than this.
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The angels' white wings
dbdumonteil4 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Another reactionary melodrama,which tried to capitalize on the success of "Le Voile Bleu",one of Gaby Morlay's famous parts in the occupation days;both movies reflect the Vichy ideology.

A widower has got three daughters ;one of them tries to hit the big time in the slightly corrupted world of music hall whereas a good guy in love with her has a "decent" job :he is a mechanic and about to buy a garage;but there's worse: the other girl is pregnant by a man who left her crying;she contemplates an abortion but fortunately a nun comes to her rescue.

In "Le Voile Bleu",Gaby Morlay played the part of a nanny whose self-denial has become the symbol of the cinema of Vichy.(The actress married a minister from the government of Vichy and it almost broke her career at the end of WW2) She will go even further in "Les Ailes Blanches" :a long flashback shows her youth (but Morlay was 46,and even with makeup ,could not pass up for a young maid anymore) ,her love lost forever,her money match,the ruin of her father,the death of her first love killed in WW1,you name it....That's not at all surprising that ,having an aunt in a convent (Marcelle Géniat),she becomes a nun! ..and ready to help the poor girls who have "sinned" and to show them (gently and charitably) the straight and narrow.

Most amazing thing ,at a certain point ,a calendar reads "December the 13th,1939" and there is no hint about the war which had begun three months before;for the occupied France ,they thought that it was over and lost ,so no need to talk about it anymore.

An invaluable document for historians ;for cine buffs,well..
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