Film Review
Although he devoted the greater part of his career to making
pornographic films (under the name Patrick Aubin), Jean-Claude Roy also
had some success nearer to the mainstream, initially with light
comedies such as
Une nuit au Moulin
Rouge (1957) and
Les Combinards
(1966), latterly with gritty crime-thrillers, often with a nasty visceral edge.
L'Insolent is one of the latter
films, a film that slavishly adheres to a well-established format
(heist plus betrayal results in bloody finale) and offers nothing new
to a well-worn genre, although that hardly makes it a bad film.
With a solid script and a respectable troupe of actors to play with,
Roy turns out a film which, whilst not exactly brimming with
originality, holds the attention and compares reasonably well with
films by other masters of the policier genre in France at the time,
notably Jacques Deray and Georges Lautner.
The American actor Henry Silva was something of a casting coup.
By this time, he already had a reputation for playing cold-blooded
killers in gangster films and so he was eminently well-suited to play
the central protagonist in Roy's film, a conscienceless hoodlum who
kills as easily as he breathes. Here, Silva is well-matched by
André Pousse, an equally charismatic actor but one with a far
more ambiguous and complex persona. The interplay between Silva
and Pousse's characters is what most sustains this formulaic thriller -
what begins as an uneasy alliance soon escalates into a deadly personal
war, and the spectator is never sure who to side with - Silva, the
cruel psychopath, or Pousse, the calculating chessplayer. Had a
little more thought and money been spent on it,
L'Insolent could have been quite a
memorable entry in the thriller genre. In any event, it is
considerably easier to digest than Roy's subsequent thriller
atrocity
Massacres (1991).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Emmanuel Ristack, a ruthless American gangster nicknamed 'L'Insolent',
succeeds in escaping from the Santé prison. Without delay,
he hooks up with his old partner in crime, Marco, and enlists his help
in his next criminal exploit - to hold-up a van laden with gold
bullion. With the help of Milan, the owner of a thriving
nightclub, Ristack and Marco manage to get away with the precious
cargo. The problems begin when Milan decides to double-cross his
criminal associates...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.