Arch
of Triumph (1948) was the second pairing for Boyer and
Ingrid Bergman. Taken from the best-selling novel by Erich Maria Remarque,
the film is a dark, grim drama of desperate times and equally desperate people.
Enterprise Pictures, the production
company, used a favorite Hollywood ploy -- they told Bergman they had Boyer,
they told Boyer they had Bergman; neither could refuse, so Enterprise got both.
For the third star there was Charles Laughton, in the deliciously disgusting
part of a Gestapo official.
The story takes place in Paris of 1938. Boyer plays Ravic, a surgeon and displaced refugee from the Nazis who illegally practices his profession while constantly evading deportation. Usually devoid of all emotion in the interest of survival, Ravic is suddenly catapulted into murderous rage when he spots his Nazi nemesis Haake (Laughton) at a street cafe, and begins to plot Haake's demise.
But when Ravic meets Joan Madou, (Bergman) a drifter and cafe singer, he is drawn into a bittersweet love affair with her. She offers him new hope...until he is apprehended by the French police and deported. In despair, and believing Ravic will never return, Joan takes up with a rich playboy. The situation goes from bad to worse when Ravic does return after several months - and Joan is torn between her love for him and her craving for the luxurious lifestyle her admirer has made possible.
Charles
Laughton called the film "a tragedy relieved by heavy doses of gloom and good
honest tedium." Well, it isn't that bad - several scenes between
Boyer and Bergman are very good indeed - but given the cast and the story's
origin, it is disappointing in that it does not reach its potential.
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