Biography: life and films
Yves Boisset was born in Paris, France, on 14th March 1939. He developed
an interest in cinema at an early age and started out as a film critic, contributing
articles to review magazines such as
Cinéma and
Midi Minuit
Fantastique. In the late 1950s, he collaborated with Jean-Pierre
Coursodon and Bertrand Tavernier on the book
Vingt ans de cinéma
américain. Boisset began his film career by working as an
assistant to many eminent directors, including Yves Campi (
Le Vent se
lève (1959)), Jean-Pierre Melville (
L'Aîné des Ferchaux
(1963)), Claude Sautet (
L'Arme à gauche (1965)) and René
Clément (
Paris brûle-t-il? (1966)). He made his
directing debut in the late 1960s with two routine thrillers,
Coplan sauve
sa peau (1968) and
Cran d'arrêt
(1970).
It was with his third feature,
Un condé
(1970), that Boisset found his voice and used it effectively to make an outspoken
attack on police methods in modern day France. This was the first in
a series of provocative but mostly well-received films criticising society
and those in positions of power - the judiciary, the police and politicians.
Boisset acquired a reputation as a left-leaning provocateur, and his films
made a valuable contribution both to the development of the
neo-polar,
a new kind of thriller with an overt political slant, and on-going public
debates on such important subjects as the misuse of power in high places
and racism.
Boisset followed his thriller
L'Attentat
(1972), inspired by the Ben Barka affair, with
R.A.S. (1973), one of the first French
films to tackle the then taboo subject of the Algerian War.
Dupont Lajoie (1975), a shocking
indictment of racism in contemporary France, won the Special Jury Prize at
the Berlin International Film Festival in 1975, and
Le Juge Fayard dit
Le Shériff (1977), an attack on political involvement in the
judiciary, was honoured with the Prix Louis-Delluc in 1976, whilst also giving
Patrick Dewaere one of his best screen roles.
La Femme flic (1980) was no
less controversial, as it dealt with the subject of paedophilia.
Boisset also adapted a number of novels by some well-known authors, memorably
bringing together Philippe Noiret, Charlotte Rampling, Fred Astaire and Peter
Ustinov in
Un taxi mauve
(1977) (after a book by Michel Déon) and subjecting Marlène
Jobert to a flight for her life in
Folle
à tuer (1975) (after Jean-Patrick Manchette). Boisset
had a notable hit with
La
Clé sur la porte (1978), based on a novel by André
Weinfeld, thanks to the inspired pairing of Annie Giradot and Patrick Dewaere.
Allons z'enfants (1980)
is arguably the most satisfying of Boisset's adaptations. Based on
Yves Gibeau's novel, it offers a stark and damning picture of youth being
forced into the army by their parents and then ending up as canon fodder.
In the 1980s, Boissot mainly concerned himself with thrillers, the best of
these being
Espion, lève-toi
(1982),
Le Prix du danger
(1983) (remade as
The Running Man four years later with Arnold Schwarzenegger)
and
Canicule (1984), with Lee
Marvin.
From the mid-1980s, Yves Boisset's box office appeal was on the decline so
he switched to working more or less exclusively for television. Much
of his made-for-television work consists of historical pieces -
L'Affaire
Seznec (1993),
L'Affaire Dreyfus (1995) and
Le Pantalon
(1997). He also made a number of informative, well-researched documentaries,
such as
La Bataille d'Alger (2007) and
Les Mystères sanglants
de l'OTS (2006), an exposé of the Order of the Solar Temple.
He hasn't made a film for cinema since
La Tribu (1990) and his most
recent television offering is
12 balles dans la peau pour Pierre Laval
(2009). He published his autobiography,
La Vie est un choix,
in 2011.
© James Travers 2017
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