Film Review
Best known for his popular thrillers and comedies of the 1960s and 1970s, Georges Lautner
also made a few unconventional films which are often the best examples of his work.
La Maison assassinée is one such film,
a rural whodunit of the kind which is comparatively rare in French cinema (the most famous
example is probably Christian-Jaque's 1941 film
L'Assassinat du Père Noël).
Whilst this is not Lautner's best film, it has many strengths - good acting,
a good script, good location photography - and as a suspense thriller it works rather
well.
Now better known as a popular singer, Patrick Bruel also has a respectable career
as an actor and in this film he turns in a fairly convincing performance. Most of
the cast were stage actors with few, if any, film credits at the time, although some went
on to become well-known faces in cinema - notably Anne Brochet. The one actor
who stands out is Yann Collette, whose portrayal of a disfigured World War I veteran is
rather poignant. By contrast, Ingrid Held's performance as a “Sex in
the City”-style nymphomaniac is too modern, too excessive for this kind of historical
drama, and her contribution is to the detriment of the film's period atmosphere.
Like all good detective fiction, this is a film which demands a great deal of
effort from its audience if its very complicated plot is to make any sense. Murder
mysteries invariably contain a number of red herrings, but here there are enough herrings
to keep a fishmonger's in business for a year. This isn't a problem
if you can stay awake, although some supernatural elements in the latter part of the film
were probably a mistake and weaken the film's credibility.
Overall,
La
Maison assassinée is a pretty respectable variant on the mystery-thriller
film. It succeeds in capturing the mood of a rural community after the First World
War, it tells an intriguing story rather well, and it makes a pleasant change from contemporary
urban thrillers. In the twilight if his filmmaking career, Georges Lautner still
manages to pull a few pleasant surprises.
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Georges Lautner film:
L'Invité surprise (1989)
Film Synopsis
In the aftermath of the First World War, Séraphin Monge
returns to his home village in the south of France and sets about finding
himself a job. Working as a road-mender, he gets to meet another man,
Brigue, who is able to shed some light on his mysterious past. Séraphin
is surprised to learn that, almost a quarter of a century ago, his entire
family was slaughtered in the course of one stormy night. He was the
only survivor, then just a baby of four months. The murders were blamed
on a party of migrant workers from Eastern Europe - they were soon arrested
and executed, although not everyone was convinced of their guilt at the time.
These revelations make a deep impression on Séraphin, who has agonised
over what became of his family for years. In a mad frenzy, he
begins to demolish the house within which the carnage took place. In
doing so, he finds a small box containing credit notes signed by three notables
in the village - Didon Pujol, Gaspard Dupin and Célestat Dormeur.
It suddenly occurs to Séraphin that these three men are the ones who
murdered his family, so without further reflection he commits himself to
killing each one of them. His first victim will be Dupin, a wealthy
man who lives in a large house with his daughter Charmaine and son Patrice.
The fact that Séraphin feels some kinship with Patrice, another war
veteran who was badly mutilated on the battlefield, does not dissuade him
from his dark purpose, nor does his strong physical attraction for Charmaine.
But whilst Séraphin is being seduced by the over-sexed daughter, the
father succumbs to what seems to be a terrible accident. Victim number
two, the miller Didon Pujol, also dies in mysterious circumstances before
the would-be executioner can reach him. It seems that someone knows
what is on Séraphin's mind and is going out of his way to protect
him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.