Jacques Feyder had been working in Hollywood since 1929. However, in 1932, when he and
MGM failed to reach an agreement on any new projects, he returned to France. One of his last unrealized projects in Hollywood had been to direct
Greta Garbo in an adaptation of Pirandello's
Come tu mi vuoi (
As You Desire Me), in which he proposed to give a different voice to Garbo for part of her role. He carried this same idea into the scenario for
Le Grand Jeu, in which two different roles would be played by the same actress, but with one of them dubbed by a different voice to create a disconcerting dramatic effect. Marie Bell's own voice was used in the role of Florence, but Claude Marcy dubbed her voice in the character of Irma. (Marcy also regularly dubbed the dialogue of Greta Garbo for French distribution of her films.) With
Charles Spaak as his scenarist, Feyder developed a romantic drama set in the colonial world of French North Africa, which he had previously explored in his silent film
''L'Atlantide''. For the central character of Pierre, Feyder had originally wanted
Charles Boyer, but after a disagreement between them he chose the popular film and theatre actor
Pierre Richard-Willm. One of the assistant directors on this film (and others by Feyder) was
Marcel Carné, some of whose later films (
Le Quai des brumes,
Le jour se lève) would create a similar mood of romantic fatalism (and
poetic realism). ==Reception==