Film Review
The inability of the French police to bring to justice a notorious
serial killer in the 1990s was one of the
causes célèbres of
the decade, and the full story of this sorry debacle is recounted in
gruesome detail in
L'Affaire SK1,
the cinematic debut feature from director Frederic Tellier. After
working as an artistic director on Olivier Marchal's acclaimed policier
36, quai des Orfèvres (2004),
Tellier cut his teeth as a director on several films and series for
French television, including the recent thriller series
Les Hommes de l'ombre (2012).
Based on a book by the journalist Patricia Tourancheau, his first film
for the cinema has a mania for detail and realism that sets it apart
from the recent spate of French thrillers, which seem to be far more
preoccupied with style and visual impact. It's a slick and meaty
entry in the police procedural line, but it gets somewhat bogged down
in the detail and demands a high level of concentration if you are to
avoid losing the plot.
SK1 was the codename for the
first serial killer investigation carried out by the French police that
made use of DNA evidence. It took ten years for the police to
find the killer and bring a case against him that would stand up in
court. Endless bureaucracy, departmental rivalry and a woeful
lack of resources in the French police allowed rapist and murderer Guy
Georges (nicknamed The Beast of the Bastille) to remain at liberty for
a decade, whilst the brutal murders of seven women and several other
assaults remained unresolved. It is a shocking story of
incompetence and professional misconduct that continues to shame
France's police, long after Georges's well-publicised conviction in
2001.
Tellier's film is far from judgemental and opts for a detached view of
the case, taking neither the side of the police or the murderer.
Whilst this even-handedness perhaps lessens the film dramatically, it
gives it greater legitimacy than if there had been an obvious bias or
axe to grind. If anything, it is the system that is shown to be
at fault, not the individuals trying to work within it, and in
Raphaël Personnaz's Franck Magne, the central character, we have a
committed cop working against the odds to arrest the activities of a
homicidal psychopath. The film is meticulous in its attention to
detail, but as a result the characterisation suffers a little.
The secondary characters have hardly any depth at all and even
Personnaz's character is short-changed, his homelife reduced to a few
banal incidents that barely merit inclusion in a weak soap opera.
It's hard to fault the acting, though, even if the performances are
somewhat compromised by a script that wastes little time fleshing out
the characters. Personnaz effectively carries the film by himself with
his brooding and humane portrayal of a cop driven by an obsessive
commitment to his job, effectively partnered with a more down-to-earth
colleague played with similar conviction by Olivier Gourmet.
Nathalie Baye brings a cool professionalism to her performance as the
killer's defence lawyer, a strangely ambiguous character who appears to
be more concerned with understanding her client's warped psychology
than seeing justice run its true course. And then there is Adama
Niane, whose portrayal of the killer is memorably chilling - you end up
wishing he had been given more screen time.
Although the plot echoes that of David Fincher's
Zodiac (2007), Tellier's approach
is nearer to the doggedly realist style of Bertrand Tavernier's police
drama
L.627 (1992).
The film's relentlessly sombre tone is sustained by some moody
photography and a score composed by the director himself in
collaboration with Christophe La Pinta, but Tellier's
mise-en-scène, whilst effective, seldom rises above the level of
what you would expect for a good television drama.
L'Affaire SK1 appears far better
suited for the small screen than for a cinematic release, where it will
doubtless struggle to compete with showier thrillers that are less hung
up on detail and impartiality.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1991, Franck Magne is finding his feet as a young police inspector
at Paris's police department, 36 quai des Orfèvres. His
first investigation involves the murder of a young woman and it isn't
long before he comes up against the harsh realities of his job - long
hours, lack of resources, endless bureaucracy. For eight years,
he is doggedly in pursuit of a serial killer that no one else believes
in. Amid a fresh spate of murders, Franck suddenly discovers that
he is caught up in one of the biggest and most complex criminal
investigations ever undertaken by the French police...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.