Film Review
Jean-Pierre Melville's penultimate film is an unashamed, no holds barred homage to the
American
film noir detective thriller of the 1940s. Despite the simplicity
of its plot and the characteristic minimalism of its style,
Le Cercle rouge is
conceivably Melville's most sophisticated, most compelling, most perfect film. Many
regard it as one of the greatest - if not the greatest - French
film policier,
a genre which Melville not only mastered, but which he made an art form in its own right.
Here, in this grim existentialist tale of pointless effort, the director goes further
than he has ever gone in creating a closed world with its own rules and hazards, inhabited
by melancholic, solitary men who have no hope of salvation or happiness. Is
Melville consciously painting a cynically distorted view of our world to provoke the bourgeois
intelligentsia, creating a fantasy nightmare world to entertain the masses, or can it
simply be that this is how he happened to see the world around him? Like so much
about Melville and his work, this ambiguity of intent both intrigues and chills its spectator.
Attracting around four million spectators,
Le Cercle rouge was to be Jean-Pierre
Melville's most successful film, and this success was in no small measure down to its
exceptional cast. The film united a popular Italian film star, Gian Maria Volonté,
with three living legends in French cinema - Alain Delon, Yves Montand and - astonishingly
- Bourvil. Delon had previously worked with Melville on
Le
Samouraï (1967) and is perfectly suited to the kind of taciturn, morally
ambiguous characterisation which adorns Melville's films. Yves Montand was also
known for playing tough roles and, as a washed out cop-turned-crook, he turns in one of
his most sympathetic and credible film performances.
Most surprising is the casting of Bourvil in the part of a rough and, in fact, rather
nasty police inspector. At the time, Bourvil was known universally in France as
a comic performer, with a huge string of popular film comedies under his belt. He
was offered the part by the film's producer, Robert Dorfmann, when actor Lino Ventura
walked away from the project (reportedly after having been offended by the film's director).
With a toupee and smart suit, Bourvil is transformed from his familiar comic persona and
gives an extraordinarily believable - and rather touching - performance. Sadly,
this was to be Bourvil's last film appearance but one - he died a few weeks before the
film's release in November 1970. Gian Maria Volonté completes the ensemble,
playing a vicious criminal who perfectly complements the suave feline Delon and the world-weary
Montand.
Melville described
Le Cercle rouge as one of the most difficult he had to direct,
mainly because of his poor working relationship with Volonté, who resented the
director's authoritarian manner. It is certainly Melville's most ambitious film
and his most technically demanding. In addition to several action scenes, the film
includes a magnificent set piece: the meticulously executed robbery sequence. The
latter is almost a direct replay of the jewel heist scene in what is often cited as the
finest example of French film noir,
Du
rififi chez les hommes (1955) and allows us to marvel at the breathtaking detail
and precision in Melville's art. The influence of the American gangster film (particularly
John Huston's 1950 film
The Asphalt Jungle)
is also clearly evident in this
part of the film.
Le Cercle rouge marks the absolute summit in Melville's film making career.
Although relentlessly pessimistic - a feeling that is emphasised by the bleak location
photography, the brutally tragic ending and the fact that most of the film is set at night
- there is a streak of humanism that is scarcely discernible in Melville's previous gangster
films. This lends the film a poignancy which allows us to feel for the characters
(even if practically nothing is revealed to us about their past), as they are drawn ever
closer towards their ineluctable doom... in the Red Circle.
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Pierre Melville film:
Un flic (1972)
Film Synopsis
Police superintendent Mattei is escorting a suspected criminal, Vogel, across France on
a train. After a daring escape, Vogel, goes on the run. With the police closing
in on him, the fugitive hides in the boot of a car owned by a sophisticated crook, Corey,
who has only just been released from prison. When Vogel saves Corey's life,
the two men strike up an immediate rapport. Corey offers Vogel a part in an ambitious
jewel robbery, to take place in Paris's prestigious Place Vendôme. They recruit
a third man, Jansen, formerly a detective, now an alcoholic recluse, whose skill as a
marksman is key to the success of the operation. Meanwhile, Mattei is doggedly on
the trail of Vogel and will resort to any means to bring him to justice...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.