Film Review
Far better known for his comedies (including some of the musical
variety), director André Berthomieu shows a surprising flair for
suspense thriller in this involving, well-paced French film noir, which
is all the better for being scripted by Frédéric Dard,
one of France's top crime writers. By the late 1950s, noir-style
thrillers or polars (as they were known in France) had become a
mainstay of French cinema, visibly influenced by their somewhat
grittier American counterparts.
En
légitime défense starts out as a fairly tame entry
in the genre, an unintended crime leading predictably into a courtroom
drama which proceeds at a snail's pace before it takes a very
unexpected turn. Thereafter, things head down a far murkier and
much less pedestrian passage, concluding with a finale that is both
shockingly sadistic and visually stunning, far more gratifying than the
usual dumb shoot-out that concludes most films of this kind.
En légitime défense
may be a minor entry in a somewhat over-subscribed genre - it has none
of the stylistic brilliance or sustained dramatic power of
Du rififi chez les hommes
(1955) or
Le Deuxième souffle
(1966) - but it is an entertaining second leaguer, helped along by a
perfectly acceptable cast and a well-honed script with a few appealing
twists and turns. As a sympathetic police inspector, Bernard
Blier shows an unusually humane departure from the hard-boiled,
seemingly infallible 'tecs (of the Lino Ventura variety) that
predominated in the French policier, perfectly matched against the cool
but deadly Pierre Mondy as the main villain of the piece. Even
though they are playing pretty flagrant archetypes, Blier and Mondy
make their characters interesting and totally believable, chillingly so in
the case of Mondy.
Before he became better known as a singer, Philippe Nicaud first found
his feet as an actor, and it is his talent for playing the wide-eyed
innocent with a morbid fear of getting his head smashed in that is put
to good use in this film. Other names that will be familiar to
French film aficionados are Jean Lefebvre and Robert Dalban, comedy
stalwarts who show that they are just as at home in more 'serious' fare
of this kind - Dalban is positively terrifying, with not so much as a
whiff of his customary amiability. Providing some welcome relief
from all this overworked male machismo is a supremely attractive Maria
Mauban, who gets to shine in a slick and saucy cabaret number that
would liven up anyone's evening in Pigalle. How Mauban ended up
as Mrs Louis de Funès in
Le Gendarme et les Extra-terrestres
(1978) is a mystery that not even Frédéric Dard would be able to unravel.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Pierre Lambert is the owner of a fashionable bar,
À l'Ami Pierrot, situated in
the trendy heart of Pigalle, Paris. His girlfriend, Dora, is a
singer at the
Nouvelle Éve
cabaret nearby. To keep on good terms with the local gangsters,
Pierre has to pay protection money to a racketeer named Albert.
One evening, Petit Bob, one of Albert's henchmen, pays Pierre a visit
and demands more money, on account of the fact that the bar is doing
good business. Pierre refuses to pay up and decides not to
involve his friend Martinet, a police inspector whose life he saved
during the war. He soon comes to regret these decisions, since,
the next day, Albert shows up in his bar, accompanied by his
heavies. On impulse, Pierre takes a gun from the till and the
next thing he knows Albert is lying dead at his feet. Pierre's
first instinct is to run, but Martinet persuades him he must stand trial
and convince a court that he acted in self-defence. Thanks to
testimony supplied by Petit Bob, the unlikeliest of allies, Pierre is
acquitted and can resume his former, trouble-free life. Then his
nightmare begins...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.