Film Review
Three years after his successful wartime drama
Le Passage du rhin, French film
director André Cayatte made
Le
Glaive et la balance, a film in which he revisits one of his
favourite subjects: failure inside the justice system. This
crime-drama, partly filmed on the French Riviera, deals with a moral
dilemma: three men are accused of murder but only two of them are
guilty. As usual, Cayatte exposes the soul of his main characters
and confronts the viewer with some complex issues: should we sentence
an innocent man or acquit two criminals?
At the time of the film's release, ardent supporters of Cayatte's work
talked about a suspenseful and efficiently made thriller, well-scripted
by Henri Jeanson's and with several actors at their best - Oscar winner
Anthony Perkins (who played his role in French, a language he knew very
well), rising star Jean-Claude Brialy and Latin lover Renato Salvatori
(in real life, Annie Girardot's husband). On the other hand, the
film was written off by the young Turks of the rising Godardesque
generation. Maybe it is true that the film has one structural flaw,
namely that the issue of guilt is not central to the story and the main
interest is which of the three men is not guilty.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2012
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Next André Cayatte film:
Piège pour Cendrillon (1965)
Film Synopsis
The American Johnny Parsons is a bad painter who has difficulty selling
his work. His girlfriend, Agnès, works as a secretary for
the rich Mrs Winter, a widow who lives in a Riviera villa with her 10
year-old son. Jean-Philippe Prévost is the owner of an
estate agency who is struggling to recover from a serious business
mishap. François Cordier is a water-skiing instructor who
makes a decent living, thanks to his mistress, the wealthy Mrs
Darbon. One day, Mrs Winter's son is kidnapped and killed by two
men. These men are pursued by the police but when they are run to
ground, on a beach, the police find three men, not two. These men
are Johnny, Jean-Philippe and François. Each of them tells
a different story, each accuses the other two...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.