Jacques Demy’s underrated The Pied Piper
could be viewed as lacking focus, the title narrative almost crowded out by an
emphasis on the conniving of church and state; for a children’s film (of sorts
anyway - I recall it being shown on
daytime British TV back in the day) there’s a persistent emphasis on death,
bigotry and venality. As such, it provides yet more evidence of Demy’s
mischievously perverse streak: the casting of an amiably diffident Donovan as
the piper might suggest a somewhat fluffy approach, but any such impression
would be highly offset by the estimable (and very British, for a film set in
Germany) presence of John Hurt, Donald Pleasence, even Diana Dors! (there’s also
Oliver Twist’s Jack Wild, his prematurely worn appearance in itself
rather poignantly resonant). The film is bookended by the arrival and departure
of a family of traveling performers, but Demy hardly bothers to develop them as
characters, his attention shifting between the financial strains caused both by
the construction of a cathedral and by pending wars, a Jewish alchemist
persecuted by the religious establishment, a lovelessly strategic marriage (all
the creepier for the casting of a 13-year-old actress), and the core plague/piper
narrative, at times seeming here almost like an afterthought, but perhaps all
the more persuasive for that, rendering the piper’s discomfiting revenge almost
an inevitable consequence of wrong-headed governing decisions (he leaves behind
the children of the kind and tolerant itinerant family). And then the closing scroll
highlights the numbers who died of the plague and the persistent religious
persecution, causing us to wonder whether we’ve all along been watching a more
conventional historical epic than we realized (especially, perhaps, as the
closing credits reveal the film to be an early production of David Puttnam, a
decade or so before providing British cinema with its big night at the Oscars).