Tumultes (1932) Poster

(1932)

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Dark vision
kinsayder1 October 2009
When small-time crook Ralph Schwarz (Charles Boyer) is released from prison early for good behaviour, he heads straight back to his girlfriend Ania, unaware that she's having an affair with Gustave, a successful photographer. Knowing Ralph's violent temper, Ania's smart move would be to drop Gustave without delay. But she's unable to resist a good thing, any more than Ralph can resist the murderous rage that consumes him when he finds out.

Set almost entirely at night or in shadowy gloom that seems to press in upon the characters, Tumultes is a dark film both thematically and optically. It doesn't leave you with a good feeling about the human race. We are, in Siodmak's vision, wretched creatures, imprisoned and ultimately destroyed by our lowest impulses. Twice in the film Ralph gets free from captivity. But his freedom is illusory. His obsessive jealousy and pride, centred around the femme fatale Ania, make his downfall a grim inevitability.

Charles Boyer is magnificent as the unlikeable but fascinating Ralph. As in the best noirs, there is a tragic dignity about this doomed anti-hero, and Boyer captures this perfectly in the lull before the final storm, as Ralph sits quietly eating an apple with his knife while he waits for Ania's latest beau to arrive.

Siodmak's other great French noir, Pièges, is perhaps a more entertaining film, lightening the darkness with comedy and with a strong-willed central character who is in control of her fate. But Tumultes is the more concentrated, complex and psychologically penetrating of the two.
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8/10
"Gentlemen, if every man was doing like me,you would think twice before destroying a married couple."
morrison-dylan-fan4 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
In the middle of viewing every French film either on disc or download which currently has English Subtitles, (all of which have now been reviewed)I started planning what the final film from the year should be. Keeping his films near the front of my "watch list" since getting hold of most of them in the New Year day holiday season,the criss-cross of this being Robert Siodmak's lone French title from the year,led to this being my final viewing of 1932 French cinema.

View on the film:

One of four films he made in 1932, (the others being Quick,and alternative language versions of Quick and Tumultes) auteur director Robert Siodmak & cinematographers Gunther "Metropolis" Rittau and Otto Baecker eye up the effect of being locked in the big house has had on Schwarz, via Siodmak and the cinematographers stylishly obscuring the view with objects placed at the front of shots,and Siodmak darting the camera across the flats where people look out and see Schwarz's fist fights,reflecting the blinded vision of Schwarz to all the changes from his friends and lover. Wonderfully cross-cutting between circling fireworks and a circling death of a relationship, Siodmak grinds a brittle Film Noir atmosphere, as refined tracking shots follow the grubby Schwarz down charcoal side-streets,leading to the glamour and glitz surrounding Schwarz's old dame Ania, which he is unable to fit back into.

Released from jail expecting society to have stood still, the screenplay by Robert Liebmann/ Yves Mirande and Hans Muller keep everyone on-edge over igniting Schwarz's short-fuse in discovering that he is now an outcast of high society. Stealing items in an attempt to blend back in, the writers give Schwarz's love for Ania a seeping decay, rung from Ania desiring her current lover, but living in fear over Schwarz's response. Given a set in stone image by Schwarz,"Florelle" gives a great turn as Ania, whose glamour is used by Florelle as a mask to hide the fears and desires she now holds against her former lover.Wishing to roll back the years, Charles Boyer gives a cracking turn as Schwarz, whose dreams of getting back with the old gang Boyer tightly screws into finding that the real jail is the outside world.
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Charles Boyer:dawn of a career.
dbdumonteil29 January 2006
Charles Boyer is well known of the American audience for he worked with the best directors:Cukor,Preminger,and more.

Robert Siodmak's "tumultes" has got a very good reputation in France:I must say I was a bit disappointed ;this director would do a better job with "pièges" some years later.

"Tumultes" 's conclusion is something like that: being in jail is awful,but living in the free world is still worse! The first part is not enthralling,IMHO,but things go much better in the second half: the sequences at the fair are film noir at its best : the fight between Boyer and his girlfriend's lover scenes, during a firework which becomes part of the action, compares favorably with those in Hitchcock's "strangers on a train" (which was released 20 years later!).That scene when Boyer takes out a knife and .. eats an apple ,in front of his terrified lover commands admiration too.

Interesting but not for all tastes.
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