Film Review
O.S.S. 117 n'est pas mort would have been a fairly inconsequential
spy movie were it not for the fact that it marked the screen debut for the
most famous secret agent in French popular fiction - namely Hubert Bonnisseur
de La Bath, code name OSS 117. Jean Bruce's fictional spy first appeared
in print in 1949, four years before Ian Fleming published his first James
Bond novel. OSS 117 beat his British rival 007 to the big screen by
five years (the first Bond movie being
Dr
No (1962)), although Bond had already appeared on television in an
episode of the American anthology series
Climax! in 1954.
As for his earlier Lemmy Caution adventure
Cet homme est dangereux
(1953), director Jean Sacha took his inspiration from American film
noir thrillers of the late 1940s, early '50s. Indeed, so precisely
does
O.S.S. 117 n'est pas mort replicate the look and feel of an American
crime B-movie of this period that you could hardly fail to mistake it as
such if it were dubbed into English. The moody, expressionistic lighting
and exaggerated camera angles bring a touch of class that goes some way to
hiding the film's obvious failings - a hopelessly pedestrian script and some
incredibly sloppy mise-en-scène - but overall the entire production
looks cheap and amateurish, particularly when it is compared with the more
polished OSS 117 films made in the 1960s, starting with
OSS 117 se déchaîne
(1963).
Ivan Desny is a curious choice for the role of OSS 117, more a debonair romantic
of the Ronald Colman school of charm than a sexy modern action hero in the
Sean Connery mould. The Swiss actor never became a big star but he
had a prolific career, with over two hundred film and television appearances,
including Max Ophüls's
Lola Montès
(1955), Anatole Litvak's
Anastasia
(1956) and Rainer Werner Fassbinder's
The Marriage of Maria Braun
(1979). Desny's lack of presence and raw masculinity may have been
the reason why he was never asked to reprise the role - he was followed by
Kerwin Mathews, Frederick Stafford and John Gavin successively in subsequent
films.
O.S.S. 117 n'est pas mort is hardly the most auspicious
of screen debuts for a French cultural icon but it just about holds the attention
in spite of its low production standards and dawdling, uninspired narrative.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
French secret agent Colonel Hubert Bonnisseur de La Bath (alias OSS 117)
is asked by a close acquaintance Muriel Rousset to recover a set of secret
documents that have been stolen from the safe of Sir Anthony Lead.
The latter lives on a sumptuous estate, the Villa Floride, near Toulon on
the French Riviera, with his two daughters Anita and Marion. As the
documents are of great strategic value, Hubert has his work cut out trying
to recover them, and he comes close to meeting his maker when the brakes
on his car are sabotaged. By staging an accident, Hubert lulls his
adversary into a false sense of security and discovers that Sir Anthony's
enemy is right on his doorstep...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.