Adapted from Émile Zola's novel of the same name, Marcel L'Herbier's L'Argent [Money] is an opulent classic of late-silent era cinema. Filmed in part on location at the Paris stock exchange, it reveals a world of intrigue, greed, decadence, and ultimately corruption and scandal when business dealings and amorous deceit combine.
Business tycoons Saccard and Gunderman lock horns when the former attempts to raise capital for his faltering bank. To inflate the price of his stock, Saccard concocts a duplicitous publicity stunt involving the unwitting aviator Hamelin and a flight across the Atlantic to drill for oil, much to the dismay of his wife Line. While Hamelin is away, the lascivious Saccard attempts to seduce Line, whose own temptation by the allure of money puts herself and her husband in danger – pawns in a high-stakes chess game played out by unscrupulous speculators.
With an all-star cast (Brigitte Helm and Alfred Abel, fresh from Fritz Lang's Metropolis, alongside Pierre Alcover, Yvette Guilbert, and luminary of the French avantgarde Antonin Artaud) and a mammoth budget, L'Argent is comparable in period and scale with other celebrated epics of the silent era, such as Abel Gance's Napoléon. With its use of portable cameras that literally descend into the Bourse and revolve around its lavish contours, L'Argent represents a type of
cinematic Impressionism distinctive to the "silent art" – a poetry that would change forever with the coming of sound.
L'Argent has been confirmed for a UK DVD release on 24th November 2008 by Eureka under the Masters of Cinema banner as a 2-disc Special Edition at the RRP of £22.99. The release features a pristine transfer from a fine grain print struck from the original negative, featuring the director's cut fought for by L'Herbier over many years, the film speed as projected in the late 1920s and the entirety of each frame fully displayed. The extra features are:
- New and improved English subtitles;
- Newly improvised musical accompaniment by French composer and pianist Jean-François Zygel, who also provides a video introduction to the film and a documentary about accompanying silent cinema;
- About L'Argent [Autor De L'Argent] (1928) – Jean Dréville's 40 minute "making of" documentary;
Archival footage of star Brigitte Helm (fresh from Fritz Lang's Metropolis) arriving in Paris for the shooting of L'Herbier's film;
- Archival screen-tests of the L'Argent actors;
- Marcel L'Herbier: Poet Of The Silent Art [Marcel L'Herbier: Poete De L'Art Silencieux] (2007) – a 54 minute documentary profiling the director;
- A demonstration of L'Herbier's innovative sound techniques, which used 78rpm records during key scenes of L'Argent;
- A lavish 80-page perfectly-bound booklet with archival publicity stills, a long essay by noted professor of French film Richard Abel (French Cinema: The First Wave, 1915-1929; French Film Theory and Criticism: A History/Anthology, 1907-1939; The Ciné Goes to Town: French Cinema, 1896-1914), newly translated interviews with L'Herbier, and newly translated extracts from the director's biography.
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