Film Review
Gallimard's publication of American pulp fiction crime novels in its celebrated
Série Noire range was one of the most significant cultural
phenomenon to hit France in the decade following the end of the Second World
War. Not only would it have a massive impact on the reading habits
of the French nation, with home-grown crime writers such as Auguste Le Breton,
Albert Simonin and José Giovanni fuelling the craze with their own
experience of the Parisian criminal underground ('Le Milieu' as it is quaintly
known), it would also have major implications for French cinema. Crime
films had been popular in France since the 1920s but it was only in the mid-1950s
that the
film policier became the predominant genre, its popularity
shored up not only by crime novels but also by the belated arrival of American
film noir into French cinemas from the late 1940s onwards.
Jacques Becker's
Touchez
pas au grisbi (1954) was the film that firmly established the policier
in France in the mid-1950s, creating a template for a distinctly Gallic form
of film noir that would remain incredibly popular for over two decades.
It was a crucial film for its lead actor, Jean Gabin, who had been struggling
unsuccessfully to rebuild his career after his return to France following
an aborted attempt to make a name for himself in Hollywood in the early 1940s.
Grisbi not only made Gabin a star again, it also transformed his screen
image - almost beyond recognition. No longer was he the romantic hero,
a symbol of the noble proletariat, the heroic dreamer, an innocent caught
up in the cruel web of fate. This new, prematurely aged Gabin was a
tough, implacable, earthy patriarchal type, the kind you cannot help but
refer to as 'le Patron'. In Becker's film he is the archetypal world-weary
gangster, and this is the screen persona that would stick with Gabin for
much of his remaining career.
The success of
Grisbi immediately led Gabin to be cast in a similar
hard-as-nails role in another gangster film,
Razzia sur la Chnouf,
directed this time by Henri Decoin and based on a novel by Auguste Le Breton.
(It so happened that an adaptation of another Le Breton adaptation would
be released exactly one week after Decoin's film - Jules Dassin's
Du rififi chez les hommes,
another defining example of French film noir). Decoin had already delivered
some notable examples of film noir in the 1940s -
Le Bienfaiteur (1942),
Les Inconnus dans la
maison (1942),
Non coupable
(1947),
Entre onze
heures et minuit (1949) - and the only reason why he is far less
well-regarded than his contemporaries (Becker, Duvivier, Carné) is
because he lost his way towards the end of his career and ended up churning
out a succession of lamentable potboilers.
Razzia sur la Chnouf was the last unequivocally great film that Decoin
made, coming not long after his superlative Georges Simenon adaptation
La Vérité
sur Bébé Donge (1952) in which Gabin had also played
the lead role. Decoin was so in awe of Becker's film that he used it
as a model for
Razzia, even going so far as to hire
Grisbi's
cinematographer Pierre Montazel to replicate the distinctive look and feel
of the earlier film. The choice of Gabin for the lead role was a no-brainer
given this had been the chief reason for the success of
Grisbi, and
the similarity between the film is further heightened by the casting of former
professional wrestler Lino Ventura in a virtually identical role to the one
he had played in Becker's film - Gabin's animalistic counterpart, more physical,
more emotional and more feral, but just as tough.
When it was first released,
Razzia sur la Chnouf drew considerable
criticism in some quarters for its uncomfortably realistic portrayal of drugs
dealers and drugs users. At the time, the film was certainly breaking
new ground, dispensing with the sanitised clichés as it drives us
into the seedy underground lairs where addicts in varying degrees of decrepitude
are seen buying and consuming narcotics, before showing us how narcotics
are manufactured and distributed as part of a remarkably organised network
that is fiercely regimented by gun-toting thugs. It's an incredibly
violent film for its time, and the almost total absence of background music
and Decoin's distanced, near-documentary approach make the occasional bursts
of extreme violence all the more shocking and visceral.
When the bullets fly and the punches land, which they do with alarming regularity,
you can feel the pain of those on the receiving end. This is a horribly
brutal and unforgiving milieu that Decoin forces us into, and most other
French policiers of this decade are woefully mild in comparison. Here
we have a glimpse of the grittier, nastier thrillers that would become
de
rigueur in later decades, together with the almost obsessive attention
to detail that we associate with the genre's 'godfathers' - Jean-Pierre Melville
and Jacques Deray. The ingenious ways in which parcels of drugs (the
'chnouf' of the film's title) are passed on to users - some hidden in telephone
directories, others cleverly concealed in furniture on the Paris metro -
carry a coolly Melvillian touch.
Gabin's interpretation of a supposedly seasoned racketeer nicknamed Le Nantais
is the biggest shock the film has in store. There's little, if any,
of the charm we associate with Gabin (this surfaces only briefly, right at
the end of the film). Le Nantais is not your usual gangster archetype,
a mindless thug with a gun. Most of the time he is on screen, he resembles
an ordinary businessman who plies his trade as if it were completely legitimate,
seemingly oblivious to its criminal associations. Only when he encounters
resistance does the deadlier, more unforgiving side of his nature become
apparent, and then we see just how harsh and morally deficient an individual
Le Nantais is. "Can this really be Jean Gabin we are watching?" you
ask yourself as his latest screen persona goes about stamping moral decency
into the ground whilst pursuing the most despicable of trades.
In a memorably gruesome ensemble of iron-fisted tough guys and venomous females,
desperate druggies and conniving cops that are every bit as ruthless as the
criminals they are after, it is Gabin who leaves the deepest and sourest
impression. Here we have the most tacitly loathsome of the actor's
screen portrayals up until this point and yet, when the mask falls and Le
Nantais's real identity is suddenly exposed in the final act, you can't help
feeling more cheated than relieved. When he emerges from this
chilling journey into the Stygian core of the Parisian underworld, a putrid
corner of Hell that reeks of opium, cordite and crushed human detritus, Jean
Gabin looks like a man who has finally found himself. Le Patron has
arrived.
© James Travers 2016
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Next Henri Decoin film:
Folies-Bergère (1956)