Film Review
Henri Verneuil followed up his cogent political thriller
I... comme Icare (1979) with a
similarly near-to-the-knuckle néo-polar, this time one attacking
not politicians or the judiciary but the dubious activities of
multinational corporations. Verneuil was ahead of his time in
anticipating the downside of globalisation (a word that was seldom
heard at the time the film was made) and the concerns that he raises,
about the concentration of wealth and power in an ever dwindling number
of super-corporations, have become a terrifying reality. In 1980,
'mille milliards de dollars' (one thousand billion dollars) was the
turnover of the world's top thirty companies. Today, the
statistic is probably even more frightening, with some companies have
an income stream vastly in excess of the gross domestic product of most
countries. In such a world, where the reins of power are in the
hands of just a few dozen company executives, you have to wonder just
what is the point of democracy.
Mille milliards de dollars is
not only a film that remains highly pertinent to this day, it was also
astoundingly prophetic. In 2000 it was revealed that the
American computer giant IBM had played a significant part in the
Holocaust by selling punch card machines to Nazi Germany, machines
that were used for censuses as part of Hitler's purification
programme. Just like the fictional company (GTI) portrayed in the
film, IBM's pro-Nazi activities were forgotten after the war, and the
company was even compensated for damage inflicted by the Allies on its
German factories. (The journalist Edwin Black provides a
compelling case for IBM's complicity in the Nazis' planned genocide in
his 2002 book "IBM and the Holocaust".)
Mille milliards de dollars is not a
work of fiction. It is a film that is anchored in a sobering
reality.
Throughout the 1970s, Henri Verneuil was one of French cinema's most
successful mainstream film directors, turning out a string of popular
thrillers in the classic French policier mould, the highlights being
the slick gangster film
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969)
and action-oriented thriller
Peur sur la ville (1975).
Mille milliards de dollars
belongs to this series of films but is an altogether more considered
piece, one that goes beyond the stock clichés and delivers a
well-judged (and generally accurate) critique of the business
world. At the time, audiences would have been shocked by the
film's exposé of the kind of things that large companies get up
to, such as dealing through offshore subsidiaries to avoid having to
pay corporation tax back home. Nowadays, no one would bat an
eyelid. It's what every profit-conscious multi-national does -
global bandits playing the system to their advantage.
In such a morally bankrupt world, where politicians are powerless to
act in our best interest and newspaper editors are too keen to lick
corporate boots, what we need is an incorruptible moral hero to take a
stand against all this money-grubbing chicanery. And who better
to play this lone hero than Patrick Dewaere, an actor who brought a
Messianic fervour to virtually every one of his film roles? In
what is a virtual reprise of the high minded character he played so
magnificently in Yves Boisset's earlier néo-polar
Le Juge Fayard dit Le Shériff
(1977), Dewaere is admirably well chosen to play the maverick
investigative journalist who lifts the lid on a very nasty can of
worms. At this stage in his career, Dewaere was becoming
dangerously close to being typecast as the pathetic loser, so it is
interesting to see him return to a more heroic kind of role, another
marginal character but one who has great resilience and moral
strength.
The irony is that Patrick Dewaere plays a sympathetic journalist, at a
time when he was considered persona non grata by just about every
reporter in France. A year before he made this film, the actor
punched the journalist Patrice de Nussac after he broke his promise not
to revel his forthcoming marriage to Élisabeth Chalier. As
a result, he was denied interviews promoting his work and had his name
excised from film listings (or else abbreviated to the derogatory
initials P.D.). Sadly, this was to be Dewaere's penultimate
film. In a fragile state of mind after the break-up of his second
marriage, he committed suicide just a few weeks before the release of
his next film,
Paradis pour tous
(1982).
Patrick Dewaere shines most brightly when he is surrounded by a cast of
comparable talent, and this is certainly the case in
Mille milliards de dollars.
In addition to some high-profile stars - Jeanne Moreau and Mel Ferrer -
there is a mouth-watering ensemble of distinguished character actors -
Michel Auclair, Charles Denner, Jean-Pierre Kalfon and Fernand Ledoux.
Anny Duperey, who had partnered Dewaere so memorably in the offbeat
comedy
Psy (1981), and a stunning
Caroline Cellier both bring a welcome feminine presence to the film,
emphasising the cold brutality of the male-dominated business world in
which the hero becomes hopelessly ensnared. In such an impressive
cast line-up it is hard to single out one actor for particular praise
but Mel Ferrer definitely deserves a special mention for his chillingly
authentic portrayal of a hard-nosed company president. Ferrer had
had a substantial career in Hollywood and France, but here, in his
twilight years, he is at his absolute best, playing a character who
could so easily have been the greatest of Bond villains.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Henri Verneuil film:
Les Morfalous (1984)
Film Synopsis
Paul Kerjean is a journalist on a leading French news weekly,
La Tribune. One day, he
receives an anonymous phone call revealing that the respected
industrialist Jacques Benoît-Lambert is facing financial
ruin. Suspecting that he may be on to a sure-fire scoop, Kerjean
begins his own investigation and discovers that the businessman is
implicated in a fraudulent business deal with the multinational
corporation GTI. By stepping in and saving one of
Benoît-Lambert's failing business concerns, GTI hopes to gain a
foothold on a lucrative foreign market, thereby shoring up its global
dominance. Shortly after Paul has published an article exposing
this scam, Benoît-Lambert is found dead, apparently having shot
himself. Paul is unconvinced by the verdict of suicide and
continues his investigation. By interviewing some former
employees of GTI he uncovers the terrible truth about the company's far
from glorious past, but in doing so he puts his own life in peril...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.