Aventure Malgache

Aventure malgache
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Written by Jules François Clermont (story)
Angus MacPhail (uncredited)
Starring "Paul Clarus", Paul Bonifas
Music by Benjamin Frankel
Cinematography Günther Krampf
Distributed by Milestone Films
Release date
1944
Running time
30 minutes
Country UK
Language French

Aventure Malgache (1944) is a short British propaganda film in French directed by Alfred Hitchcock for the British Ministry of Information. The title means Malagasy Adventure in English.

There are conflicting reports as to the true inspiration for the film, lawyer Jules François Clermont or actor Claude Dauphin. Some sources claim the film is based on the real-life activities of Jules François Clermont, who wrote and starred in the film under the name "Paul Clarus".[1] In September 2011, The Daily Telegraph published an article noting that writer and actor Claude Dauphin had collaborated with Hitchcock to recount his own experiences of operating an underground radio station in Nazi occupied France.[2]

Plot summary

Paul Clarus, a French actor (played by "Paul Clarus") is chatting with his fellow actors (the "Molière Players") as they put on their makeup before a performance. He reminisces about a very unpleasant Vichy official, the Chef de la Sûreté, (Paul Bonifas) that he knew when he was part of the Resistance on the island of Madagascar during the Second World War. The events on Madagascar are shown in flashback.

Paul Clarus pretended to be loyal to the Vichy official, while he simultaneously worked as the head of the Resistance movement. He ran an illegal pro-Resistance radio station "Madagascar Libre", and helped arrange numerous boats to take loyal Frenchmen out of the island to safety. Finally when the Vichy government falls, we see that the Vichy official is nothing but a turncoat; in his office he rapidly replaces a portrait of Marshal Philippe Pétain with a portrait of Queen Victoria, and he changes his bottle of Vichy water for bottles of Scotch and soda water.

Cast

Home media

Milestone Films has released Aventure Malgache, paired with other 1944 French language Hitchcock short film Bon Voyage, on DVD and VHS.[3]

See also

References

  1. Kerzoncuf, Alain (5 November 2006). "Hitchcock's Aventure Malgache (or the True Story of DZ 91)". Senses of Cinema . Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  2. "Norma Eberhardt". The Daily Telegraph. 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2011-10-01.
  3. "Alfred Hitchcock's Bon Voyage & Aventure malgache". Milestone Films. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
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