Film Review
Roger Pigaut made his screen debut as an actor in Claude Autant-Lara's
classic melodrama
Douce (1943). He
continued working as an actor for the next forty years, appearing
opposite Brigitte Bardot in Georges Lacombe's
La Lumière d'en face
(1955) and playing the role of the pirate d'Escrainville in the final
two instalments of the
Angélique saga.
Ill-at-ease in front of the camera, Pigaut began directing his own
films in the late 1950s, making a respectable debut with the enchanting
Cerf-volant du bout du monde
(1958), which inspired Albert Lamorisse's
Le Voyage en ballon (1960).
It was fourteen years before he directed his next film,
Compte à rebours (a.k.a.
Countdown), released on 29th January 1971.
A solid, well-paced crime-drama,
Compte
à rebours tells the story of a vendetta that goes
horribly wrong. The subject matter is hardly original, and whilst
Pigaut's direction is competent rather than inspired, every minute of
the film is pure joy. The crisp dialogue instantly evokes the
colour of the 1970s and Georges Delerue's pounding score is the perfect
accompaniment to the bloody countdown.
The film's main selling point is its stellar cast. A decade on
from his appearance in Jean-Pierre Melville's
Le
Doulos, the actor-singer Serge Reggiani once again finds
himself in a gangster's shoes; as ever, his performance is impeccable
and the actor invests his character with enormous depth, making him as
cool as a cucumber. Here Reggiani is reunited with Simone
Signoret, almost twenty years after their famous romantic liaison on
Jacques Becker's
Casque d'or (1952).
Signoret is well-suited for the part of Léa, turning in a
heart-rendering portrayal of humiliation that is on a par with her
other great performances of this time, in such films as
Le Chat
(1971) and
La Vie devant soi (1977).
Another memorable screen partnership - that of Jeanne Moreau and
Jean-Marc Bory in Louis Malle's
Les Amants (1958) - is also
revisited, with Moreau providing the one bright spark in another wise
intensely sombre film. Then there is the dazzlingly talented
Michel Bouquet, excellent as the disturbing and Machiavellian Valberg,
and
monstre sacré
Charles Vanel, who turns another scene-stealing performance as a
paralysed old gangster. Jean Desailly is an equally fine choice
for the part of Dr Michel de Saint-Rose. No French gangster film
of their period would be complete without the familiar bad guys Marcel
Bozzuffi and Andre Pousse, and other names to watch out for are Serge
Sauvion (the actor who dubbed Peter Falk's
Columbo for French television), the
French Moroccan actor Amidou, the Swedish actor-singer Bob Asklöf
and Joëlle Bernard (Pigaut's wife).
If revenge is a dish best served cold,
Compte à rebours is a
veritable banquet for Eskimos. Thanks to its distinguished cast
and slick production values, the film had no difficulty attracting an
audience of 1.1 million on its original French release and is now
available on DVD for us all to savour.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Revenge is the only thing on François Nolan's mind when he returns
to Paris, having spent the past ten years in prison for his part in a bank
robbery that went disastrously wrong. A lot has happened in his absence.
His former mistress Madeleine is married, to Dr Saint-Rose, and his former
criminal associates - Jebel, Zampa, Gi and Ferrier - now all lead respectable
lives, enriched by the spoils of the robbery. Nolan's sole preoccupation
is to find who was responsible for his arrest and the death of his brother
Pierre, who was killed during the robbery. Nolan makes it understood
that unless one of his four erstwhile gang members identifies the culprit
he will kill each and every one of them. This he proceeds to do, having
taken care of a hitman. Nolan is not the only one with a grudge, however.
In the violent shoot out between the police and the crooks, Valberg, the
bank's insurance inspector, lost an eye. He is as determined as Nolan
that the torment inflicted on him should not go unpunished...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.