Film Review
Le Vieux Fusil was one of the
most notable French films of the 1970s, a gritty wartime action-drama
that is an obvious homage to the classic American western, particularly
High Noon (1952).
The film was fêted at the first ever Césars Ceremony in
1976, where it won the coveted Best Film award. The film also won
a César for its music (scored by François de Roubaix,
his final film composition before his death in 1975) and another for
Philippe Noiret in the Best Actor category. Although a major box
office success, the film provoked a strong reaction with its graphic
ultra-violence, which was unusual for a mainstream French film at this
time. Its popularity amongst cinemagoers and critics provided a
significant career boost to both its star (Noiret, giving arguably his
best screen performance) and director Robert Enrico (who had previously
been largely overlooked).
One of the reasons for the success of
Le Vieux Fusil is that, in typical
Gallic fashion, it combines several genres into a surprisingly
satisfying concoction. It is far more than an action film or a
war film, it is also a love story, and a rather moving one at
that. The trauma and acute sense of loss experienced by the
central character, a humane French doctor (Noiret at his best), are
emphasised, to devastating effect, by his recurring recollections of his all too
perfect marriage to the perfect wife.
There is a stark visceral quality to this film that distinguishes it from
virtually anything seen in French cinema prior to it. It had
something of the impact that Sam Peckinpah's
The Wild Bunch had on American
cinema in the late 1960s, intentionally shocking audiences with a more
realistic depiction of physical violence. Armed with grenades and
deadly flamethrowers, the Nazi villains of the piece are sadistic
brutes who deserve what they get, and what they get is almost always
pretty horrific. There is even a suggestion of black comedy as
Noiret goes around picking off the jackbooted thugs one by one, leading them to think
that they are up against an army of partisans, rather than one slightly
overweight middle-aged man with a grudge.
This is easily Robert Enrico's most impressive film - imaginatively
shot, directed with panache, and constructed in a way that delivers
maximum impact.
Le Vieux Fusil
is epic in its scale and yet it also has great intimacy. The
action sequences are slickly and convincingly realised, the kind you
would expect to find in a Hollywood blockbuster. And yet the
performances - notably from Philippe Noiret and Romy Schneider - give
the film both an unbearable tension and exquisite
poignancy. Cinematographically and stylistically,
Le Vieux Fusil was years ahead of
its time. It precedes the big budget war films that would come
out of French cinema in subsequent decades, most of which it surpasses
in both its realism and its humanity.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2010
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Next Robert Enrico film:
L'Empreinte des géants (1980)
Film Synopsis
It is 1944 and Germany is losing the war in Europe. The allied
forces have broken through on the Normandy front and the occupying
troops have begun their retreat. Meanwhile, Julien Dandieu
continues with his work as a surgeon in the Périgord. He
has no interest in politics and treats his patients without any regard
to their origins. Concerned over the safety of his family, Julien
instructs his wife Clara and their 13-year-old daughter to go to his
large country château, to wait for the end of the war. When
he visits the château a few days later, Julien is outraged when
he discovers that his loved ones have been brutally murdered by a
handful of SS soldiers, who are still in the area. A man who has
hitherto devoted himself to saving lives, Julien now decides the time
has come for him to jettison his scruples and become a killer...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.