Film Review
Although
Entre onze heures et minuit
was presumably intended as a homage to the American film noir thriller,
and does imitate the classic noir style to great effect, you could
easily mistake it for a very cheeky parody of the genre. This is
evident in the opening sequence which, rather than draw a discrete veil
over the plot's biggest contrivance (the fact that the main protagonist
is the exact double of a man whose murder he is investigating), instead
draws our attention to it with as much subtlety as a brass band on
roller skates. The main problem that Henri Decoin faced
when making the film was knowing that his leading man, Louis Jouvet,
had very recently starred in another French thriller in which he played
a dual role, Jean Dréville's
Copie
conforme (1947). Rather than hire another actor to avoid a
nasty case of déjà vu, Decoin and his screenwriting team
came up with a comedy opening which attempts to defend the
indefensible, essentially by saying that if Edward G. Robinson can get
away with it - in
The Whole Town's Talking (1935)
- so can Louis Jouvet. Methinks the lady doth protest too
much...
The comedy teaser aside,
Entre onze
heures et minuit is actually one of Henri Decoin's better films,
certainly one of his more stylish thrillers and a very respectable
example of 1940s French film noir. Employing slanted camera
angles, overlapping dissolves and high contrast photography with almost
wanton abandon, the film looks like a perfect pastiche of American film
noir, but it also has a distinctly Gallic feel to it. The characters
are not as hard-bitten or as cynical as their American counterparts,
and the moral boundary between the good guys and the villains is more
rigidly defined. There is also a great deal of humour, although
much of this is not readily apparent on a first viewing (when the
spectator is too busy trying to untangle the labyrinthine plot to look
for jokes). Of course, some of the humour is shamelessly blatant,
such as the haute couture fashion exhibition, in which wealthy patrons
bid for outfits with such names as "I shot down a cop", before being
held up by armed gangsters. Stylistically, the film sometimes
bears an uncanny resemblance to Carol Reed's
The
Third Man (1949), which was released a few months after this
film (Reed, like Decoin, was presumably heavily influenced by American
film noir).
As in all of his films, Louis Jouvet dominates the proceedings with his
familiar brooding presence and an unbeatable charisma. Skilfully
underplaying the comedy (almost to the point that you need a microscope
to see it), Jouvet gives a compelling performance which masterfully
conceals his character's intentions. It is natural to suppose
that by impersonating the gangster Vidauban, Inspector Carrel risks
being diverted from the straight and narrow, but the moral authority
that Jouvet brings to his portrayal suggests otherwise. The main
element of suspense in the film is how Jouvet's character will emerge
at the end of his tortuous adventure. The outcome is both satisfying
and surprising, very different from what you might have expected in an
American film noir. It is interesting that in Jouvet's principled
crime investigator we can already see the origins of the maverick
fictional cops of later decades, Harry Callahan and his illustrious
rule-book-hating ilk.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Henri Decoin film:
Trois télégrammes (1950)
Film Synopsis
It was between the hours of eleven o'clock at night and midnight that the
crime took place. Jérôme Vidauban, a trafficker wanted
by the police, is shot dead in a Paris subway by an unknown assassin.
Inspector Carrel is tasked with investigating the killing and is surprised
to discover that he is the exact double of the murder victim. Whilst
searching Vidauban's home, Carrel is mistaken for the crook by a suspicious-looking
individual who demands a large sum of money from him. This gives the
inspector an idea. He will use his resemblance to the dead man to inveigle
his way into the company of his erstwhile nefarious associates.
Carrel manages to deceive not only Vidauban's former mistress, Florence,
but also another hoodlum named Victor who is preparing a robbery at a fashion
house belonging to the dead man's most recent lover, Lucienne. The
latter is the only person who appears not to have been taken in by Carrel's
deception. Lucienne is not only an incredibly alluring woman, whose
charms Carrel finds hard to resist. She also turns out to be a useful ally
in the inspector's attempts to organise the arrest of Vidauban's gang, but
it soon becomes apparent that she has her own motives for doing so...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.