Film Review
Mission à Tanger was in
the vanguard of a spate of spy thrillers that enjoyed considerable
popularity in France from the late 1940s, well into the 1960s,
anticipating the global success of the British James Bond movies.
The template for these films had been set by their American
counterpart, made in Hollywood immediately after WWII, and not
surprisingly many of these were set at the time of the war. OSS
117, the most famous spy in French fiction, made his first film
appearance in
OSS 117 n'est pas mort
(1957), and he is not too far removed from the ambiguous, womanising
hero of
Mission à Tanger,
played by a smooth but devious Raymond Rouleau in his most famous
role. Rouleau's debonair Georges Masse was a hit with the public
and would appear in two subsequent films -
Méfiez-vous des blondes
(1950) and
Massacre en dentelles
(1952).
Mission à Tanger is a
slow burner, most of the first half of the film taking place in a
swanky nightclub (an easy excuse for several musical numbers) inhabited
by a motley collection that includes none other than Louis de
Funès, then a complete unknown (it would be a decade
and a half before stardom came knocking on his dressing room door). The action doesn't get
underway until well into the second half of the film, and even then it's pretty
routine stuff, directed with no particular flair for the genre by
journeyman director André Hunebelle. The payoff comes
right at the end of the film, with a tense and atmospherically shot
shoot-out scene on a moonlit beach.
The film's main claim to fame is that it was the first to which Michel Audiard, at the time a
29-year-old journalist, lent his talents as a scriptwriter.
There's precious little sign of the familiar Audiard wit in the mostly
humourless script he turns in, but it was the first step in a
monumental career that would see Audiard pen some of French cinema's
best loved and most successful films. Hunebelle would later work
with de Funès on some of his most popular films, including the
Fantômas
comedies of the mid-1960s. Although overshadowed by subsequent
spy thrillers,
Mission à
Tanger is worth re-discovering if only to gain an appreciation
of its part in shaping an important genre of French cinema.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next André Hunebelle film:
Ma femme est formidable (1951)
Film Synopsis
In 1942, the Moroccan city of Tangier is a hotbed of international
espionage. It is here that Alexandre Segard runs a spy ring,
under the cover of an import-export company. After several of his
agents have been eliminated, Segard recruits journalist Georges Masse
to uncover the identity of the traitor in his organisation. No
sooner has Masse agreed to work for Segard than he is captured by a
high-ranking Nazi agent, von Kloster. The latter offers to give
him a large sum of money and release a woman he has kidnapped if Masse
agrees to hand over a secret code used by Segard....
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.