Film Review
With two successful crime dramas under his belt, director Edouard Molinaro stays
with the genre and delivers what is quite possibly his darkest and most
stylish film. Taking his inspiration from American noir
thrillers and their French counterparts - notably the policiers films
of Jean-Pierre Melville - Molinaro constructs a well-honed
suspense thriller which, despite the threadbare plot and sparse
dialogue, is extraordinarily compelling.
By the late 1950s, the policier was beginning to become a tired,
formulaic genre in French cinema, although still remarkably
popular.
Un témoin dans
la ville is in a different league altogether, almost an art film, thanks to its
beautifully evocative design and noir photography (one of
cinematographer Henri Decaë's best pieces of work), which give the
film a sinister existentialist feel, as well as a striking sense of
cold realism.
Daringly, the narrative is focussed almost entirely on one character -
played superbly by Lino Ventura, an ex-wrestler who had a very
successful career playing hard men in films such as this. In one
of his few roles as an antipathetic villain, Ventura brings an
intensity to the film which makes his character's increasingly
desperate attempts to extricate himself from the mess he has got
himself into utterly gripping, and with a nice touch of pathos.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Edouard Molinaro film:
La Mort de Belle (1961)
Film Synopsis
In the course of a violent argument, businessman Pierre Verdier pushes his
mistress Jeanne out of a moving train. Tried for murder, he is subsequently
acquitted through lack of evidence. Ancelin, the dead woman's
husband, has no doubts over Verdier's guilt and has had plenty of time to
prepare the businessman's execution by the time he returns home. Taking
care to make his victim's death look like suicide, Ancelin leaves his house
and is surprised to find a taxi waiting outside - one that was presumably
ordered by Verdier just before he was killed.
Seeing immediately that the taxi driver, Lambert, could be a dangerous witness,
Ancelin starts to trail him around town. He has an opportunity to kill
him by pushing him off a platform in the Metro, but he cannot bring himself
to follow through. When he sees a woman hand the taxi driver a newspaper
Ancelin realises that he can hesitate no longer. He boards Lambert's
taxi and, after a brief exchange of words, shoots him dead. The conversation
and the gunshot are heard by the victim's colleagues over the two-way radio.
It is now their time to go on the offensive. Before he knows it, Ancelin
is a hunted man...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.