Film Review
One of the most unjustly underrated of Alain Delon's later films is
this twisted and highly compelling psychological drama in which the
iconic actor is given the rare luxury of playing a real character (a
lawyer facing up to his fallibility) instead of a mere caricature that
feeds off his star image. Here, Delon appears alongside an
extremely talented newcomer, Manuel Blanc, in what is pretty well a
two-handed play, and therein lies most of its appeal. At a time
when the policier genre had become predominantly action-oriented and
sensationalist,
Un crime
bucked the trend and is an unashamedly character-centric piece, focused
on the cat-and-mouse game that the two protagonists play as they
unravel the truth of a monstrous criminal exploit. The film is
based on the novel
Le Dérapage
by the distinguished French writer Gilles Perrault, who was reputedly
unimpressed by the film and refused to have anything to do with it.
Un crime is the eighth of nine
films which Alain Delon made with director Jacques Deray, who is
considered one of the masters of the French policier of the 1970s and
'80s. Deray's restrained mise-en-scène, which relies on
subtle camera motion and atmospheric lighting to build and sustain
tension, as in the old films noirs, is perfectly suited to this kind of
old-fashioned drama, and allows the principal actors to have far more
control over the film than is customary nowadays.
Un crime feels far more like a
piece of theatre than a film, its pace and energy deriving not from
fancy direction or editing, but from the mesmerising interplay of the
two main characters as they dig deeper into each other's personal
graveyards to learn the truth about one another. Despite the
difference in age and experience, Delon and Blanc complement one
another perfectly and almost appear to be mirror images of one another
- in each case, a superficially attractive exterior masks an interior
that is dark, mysterious and riddled with complex neuroses.
By the early 1990s, Alain Delon's popularity had slumped to an
unprecedented low after a series of major flops in the 1980s.
Un crime was similarly
ill-received, both by the critics and the cinema-going public, although
it did not dissuade Delon and Deray from working together one more
time, on
L'Ours en peluche
(1994), Deray's last film. A slow-paced, character-oriented film
noir,
Un crime would probably
fare much better with today's cinema audiences than it did in the
1990s, when such films were considered
démodé and
uninteresting. Delon's sober and humane portrayal of a
disenchanted lawyer prefigures his subsequent acclaimed character
creations for the small screen, Fabio Montale and Frank Riva, and
leaves us in no doubt that inside every iconic film star there is a
great actor struggling to get out.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jacques Deray film:
Le Gigolo (1960)
Film Synopsis
Fifteen months after being arrested for the murder of his wealthy
parents, Frédéric Chapelin-Tourvel is acquitted on
evidence provided by his girlfriend, Franca Miller. Charles
Dunant, the lawyer who defended Frédéric at his trial, is
surprised when he receives a phone call from his former client,
inviting him to his parents' apartment. Dunant is incredulous
when Frédéric admits that he did indeed kill his parents
and explains just how it took place...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.