The characters portrayed by Jean Gabin, a true star of 1930s films, are fro
m the working class but lack the usual attributes; they are more part of th
e popular classes but without political identities. They are vividly urban,
masculine, and individualistically French. Their antisocial tendencies and
their helplessness in the face of outside forces beyond their control lead
ing to violent escapes into oblivion made them seem heroic. Their often dua
l existence as criminal/legionnaire and worker played on the frissons long
associated in France with the combination 'working classes, dangerous class
es'. These attributes made the Gabin characters more than members of the wo
rking or popular classes and gave them a classless appeal as 'everyman', wi
th much the same universal appeal as Charlie Chaplin had for his audience.
The collective psychological profile of the Gabin-everyman includes: aliena
tion, depression, entrapment, helplessness, and escapes into nostalgia endi
ng in violence and self-destruction. In his nine films from 1935 to 1939, t
here are eight murders and seven suicides! The atmosphere of Gabin's enviro
nment is one of doomed destiny, a fate created by forces beyond his control
. The fate of Gabin's characters is in part inspired by an existing climate
of hopelessness in French society and at the same time amplifies and reinf
orces it. The crisis in French society at which this study is directed had
its denouement in the collapse of France in June 1940, resulting from immed
iate temporal and long-range structural problems. By 1939 France had become
a stalemated society. Gabin's imagined presence at the side of his popular
audience in its experience of these difficult times suggests a bonding bet
ween audience and star whereby the performance of the latter and the daily
struggles of the former become one (the kind of convergence all film makers
strive for but very rarely achieve.)