Au bonheur des dames

Duvivier's final silent film is a modern retelling of Zola's panoramic chronicle of mid-nineteenth-century Parisian society, centering on a small fabric shop struggling to survive in the shadow of a luxury department store. With expressionistic shades of Erich von Stroheim and G. W. Pabst (Duvivier worked for a time in the German film industry), Au bonheur captures the rhythms of urban life-and the pleasures of bourgeois consumer culture, with its obsessions with fashion and image-while also creating a stinging portrait of capitalist ruthlessness, class tensions, and sexual competition. “An orgy of pure cinema, from its opening train shot to its climactic visual effect of a magically converted storefront. Filming . . . in and around the Galeries Lafayette, Duvivier pulls out every trick in the book-elaborate crane and tracking shots; massive crowd scenes; surreal, constructivist montages-for this alternately sincere and cynical hymn to capitalist endeavor” (Scott Foundas, Village Voice).

This page may by only partially complete. For additional information about this film, view the original entry on our archived site.