Film Review
Clouzot's first full length film is a mild contrast with the dark, suspense-laden thrillers
for which the director is best known (
Les Diaboliques,
Le Salaire de la peur),
but it is an excellent example of the early polar genre of the 1940s.
L'Assassin habite au 21 is a comedy thriller whodunnit which, although lighter
than Clouzot's later films, still manages to contain some disturbing moments. The
great director's technique is surprisingly mature and effective in this early film, the
film's opening five minutes or so being particularly gripping and shocking.
The film shows is American film noir influence throughout, particularly in the atmospheric
lighting and photography. Pierre Fresnay reprises the part of the charismatic Inspector
Wens from his earlier film,
Le
Dernier des six (1941), which Clouzot also scripted. Suzy Delair also makes
a welcome return as Wens' bubbly girlfriend, Mila Milou.
War-time censorship (from the Nazis and the paying public) was probably a major factor
in determining the mood of the film. This could equally as well have been made as
a very dark psychological thriller (in the vein that Clouzot adopted, to his peril, for
his next film,
Le Corbeau)
Instead, a lighter approach was chosen, although
curiously the humour in this film often seems to heighten rather than relieve the tension.
Some of the characters who initially appear quite comic emerge as rather sinister individuals.
Whether this contributed to the film's success is anyone's guess, but the film was certainly
popular when it first shown and it established Clouzot's credentials as a film director.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Henri-Georges Clouzot film:
Le Corbeau (1943)
Film Synopsis
A serial killer is at large in Paris and with four victims already to his
name the police hunt to find him and bring him to justice is intensifying.
The only tangible clue the police have to go on so far is a visitor's card
with the name Monsieur Durand on it, found near each of the bodies.
The redoubtable Inspector Wens is assigned to the case, determined to unmask
the killer before he strikes again. The inspector has a promising lead
when an informer tells him that cards bearing Durand's name have been found
at a boarding house, the Pension des Mimosas.
In the guise of a cleric, Wens takes a room in this low-class establishment
and finds he has no shortage of likely suspects in the vicinity. Assisted
by his mistress, the vivacious singer Mila Malou, the inspector worms his
way into the confidence of his fellow lodgers, hoping that one of them will
betray himself or at least provide a clue as to the whereabouts of the killer.
First there is Colin, a strange man who makes mechanical toys for a living.
Then there is a retired military man, Linz. Finally, there is Lalah
Poor, a conjurer who arrays himself as an Indian mystic for his popular music
hall act.
When another murder takes place, Wens is sure Colin is the culprit and hastily
has him taken into police custody. But then there is a further killing,
so Colin is released and Linz is arrested in his place. The next murder
is at the music hall where Lalah Poor performs, so it seems that the conjurer
is the killer, and he is the next of the three lodgers to be picked up by
the police. Through lack of evidence, Lalah Poor is released and Wens'
investigation appears to have drawn a blank. But then, in the course
of a party at the boarding house, the inspector finally discovers the key
to the mystery. It seems there is more than one killer at Number 21...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.