Film Review
The popularity of Jacques Becker's slick homage to American film noir
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954)
and a sustained love affair in France for all things American after the
Liberation is what led to a sudden blitz of hardboiled
série noir-style thrillers
in the mid-to-late 1950s - the first salvo of what was to become the
most successful genre in French cinema, the
film policier or
crime-thriller. The first adaptation of the popular
Gorille novels by Antoine-Louis
Dominique,
Le Gorille vous salue bien
is a middle-of-the-road entry in this series of gratuitous pastiches of
American film noir. Its particular significance is that it made
its lead actor Lino Ventura a national star and established him in the
role for which is now best remembered, that of the archetypal heavy, as
cool as a cucumber but as deadly with his fist as he is with his
sardonic wit.
Appropriately, it was in Becker's genre-defining
Grisbi that Ventura, a former
professional wrestler, made his acting debut. He subsequently
appeared in several other lesser noir pastiches, invariably as the
taciturn tough guy, before stardom came his way. No other actor,
with the possible exception of Alain Delon, is as closely associated
with the policier genre in France. Whether he is playing the
hardened gangster or resolute cop, Ventura inhabits Le Milieu like no
other actor, exuding an aura of underworld machismo that compels his
audience to believe he is dangerous and means business, and yet there
is also has an old-fashioned charm that means that we are always on his
side. In
Le Gorille vous salue
bien, Ventura's name is omitted from the opening credits - he is
credited simply as 'The Gorilla'. It is a soubriquet which fits
the actor perfectly.
The film itself is a bit of a mixed bag. The plot is a typically
convoluted affair involving rival French security agencies, treacherous
diplomats and pretty inept hoodlums (including a sinister Jean-Pierre
Mocky doing unspeakable things with a blow torch) - the
plot twists and turns can hardly fail
to give you a migraine if you try to follow them too closely. (If
you manage to wend your way through the labyrinthine passages of this
film without the aid of a large ball of string, Howard Hawks'
The Big Sleep (1946) will be as
transparent as glass.) The film teeters on the brink of parody
but seems afraid to commit itself one way or the other; it
cannot quite reconcile its hard-edged grittiness (which borders
on sadism) with the comical absurdity of some
of its plot elements. Ventura's character
is a kind of proto-Incredible Hulk who (without the aid of green body
make-up) can turn over cars with the merest flick of
a wrist and effortlessly hurl grown men across a room, somehow
magically transforming them into inanimate plastic dummies before they hit the
ground (désolé, but methinks the editing could have been a little better...).
The familiar noir motifs are all present and correct but these are bolted
onto the film's well-worn chassis without much inspiration from either
the director or his cinematographer, who both look as if they are
slavishly following instructions from a cookery book. As was
often the case in the original American films noirs, the film's
true genius lies not in its hackneyed script or its dubious technical
artistry but in the authenticity and colour that the actors bring to
it. The one area where
Le
Gorille vous salue bien does excel is its cast. With
actors of the calibre of Charles Vanel, René Lefèvre and
Pierre Dux complementing the magnificent Ventura, the film has
no great difficulty holding the audience's attention,
even if trying to unravel the plot feels a little like
subjecting yourself to brain surgery without an anaesthetic.
The film's director, Bernard Borderie, was one of the first French
filmmakers to popularise the American-style spy thriller early in the
1950s, with the first (and best) entries in the Lemmy Caution series:
La Môme vert-de-gris
(1953) and
Les Femmes s'en balancent
(1954). He later directed the next film in the
Gorille series,
La Valse du gorille (1959), with
Roger Hanin taking over the role in which Ventura had excelled (but was
understandably reluctant to get type-cast), before scoring some
palpable hits in the swashbuckling genre - notably
Le Chevalier de Pardaillan
(1962). Borderie's biggest success was the legendary (and/or
notorious)
Angélique series of the
1960s, an odd concoction of adventure, court intrigue and coy eroticism
(lightened by a few touches of harmless sadomasochism) which made a
star of Michèle Mercier (ruining her career) and traumatised a whole generation of
French adolescents. One way or another, Bernard Borderie
has a lot to answer for.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2011
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Next Bernard Borderie film:
La Valse du gorille (1959)
Film Synopsis
Géo Paquet is one of the most dependable agents in the French secret
service. Nicknamed 'the Gorilla', he is well endowed with both brains
and brawn, and this makes him a valuable asset to the service. It seems
that Paquet's boss, Colonel Berthomieu, has his hands full trying to run
to ground a gang of traffickers who are selling stolen military secrets to
a foreign power. The plan is for Paquet to infiltrate this gang, but
to do this he needs to gain the confidence of Casa, a one-time secret agent
who now belongs to the gang. To that end, Paquet is sent to prison
on a fabricated charge and permitted to escape. He then makes his way
to the restaurant run by Casa, where he makes contact with other members
of the criminal gang.
It is now that Paquet learns the identity of the man who is passing on the
secret documents - William Veslot, a representative of the United Nations.
Veslot has been on the French secret services' radar for some time, but they
are unable to act against him as he has diplomatic immunity. To expose
Veslot's criminal activities, Paquet, posing as a journalist, offers to sell
him the plans to an atomic weapon supplied to him by Berthomieu. The
secrets trafficker sees through the deception and Paquet is soon being tortured
by Veslot's murderous associates. The agent's wife, Chaboute, comes
to his rescue just in time. Realising the threat posed by Veslot, Berthomieu
authorises Paquet to kill him. The stage is set for the bloodiest of
showdowns, with the security of the West at stake...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.