Film Review
In stark contrast to the crime thrillers with which Jean-Paul Belmondo is better known,
Le Corps
de mon ennemi has an almost total absence of action and physical displays of violence.
Director Henri Verneuil was keen that his star actor should appear in a very different
kind of film to say,
Peur sur la ville, to show off his qualities as an actor instead
of his skill as an action stunt man.
The role played by Belmondo in this film is certainly among his most challenging, involving
the actor playing the same character in two time frames, separated by seven years.
Verneuil was loth to have his actor made up to show the difference in his age, so he
used a simple dramatic device (which even found its way into the dialogue): when you look
back into your past, you see yourself as you are now, not as you were.
Constructing a coherent narrative around flashbacks is not an easy thing to pull off,
but the approach works well in this film, thanks to some accomplished editing and careful
use of sets to depict the past and the present. The past which François Leclerc
remembers in colourful, new and friendly, in sorry contrast to the cold, weary isolation
he now sees around him. The film was shot in and around the northern French
town of Lille, the monolithic textile factories providing a suitable backdrop, emphasising
the isolation and vulnerability of the film's central character.
Whilst the film works reasonably well as a crime drama, it does not quite live up to Verneuil's
vision of a quality psychological crime thriller. The absence of suspense and dramatic
intensity robs the film of impact, which the quality of the script (from legendary screenwriter Michel Audiard,
best known for his comedies such as
Les Tontons flingueurs)
and acting do not quite make up for. However, it does offer Belmondo the opportunity
to give one - or rather, two - of his best performances, in an interesting variation on
the
polar genre.
As Verneuil and Belmondo feared,
Le Corps de mon ennemi was far from
being a commercial success.
Compared with their earlier collaboration,
Peur sur la ville, it was a disappointment,
which failed to attract the French cinema going public. After 13 weeks of exploitation
in Paris, the film sold only around half a million tickets. It is, despite that,
a highly respectable entry in both Verneuil and Belmondo's filmographies.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Henri Verneuil film:
I... comme Icare (1979)
Film Synopsis
François Leclerc returns to his home, an industrial town in northern France, after
serving a seven year prison sentence for a murder he did not commit. He recalls
the events which led up to his trial, beginning with his romance with Gilberte Liegeard,
daughter of a powerful industrialist, and the spectacular opportunities for social climbing
this offered him. Before his fall from grace, Leclerc was a popular figure, managing an
exclusive night club. But he had some dangerous enemies, who implicated him in a
double murder. Seven years on, Leclerc is determined to have his revenge...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.