Film Review
When his second film,
Dites-lui que
je l'aime (1977), spectacularly bombed at the French box office,
Claude Miller very nearly gave up filmmaking for good. For the
next four years, he worked in advertising and only returned to
directing when producer Georges Dancigers invited him to adapt John
Wainwright's American crime novel
Brainwash.
As it turned out, that film -
Garde
à vue - was a major critical and commercial success, and
is widely regarded as Miller's best film. It attracted an
audience of 2.1 million in France and was nominated for eight
Césars in 1982, in categories that included Best Film and Best
Director. Michel Serrault took the Best Actor César and
the film also won awards for Best Screenplay, Best Editing and Best
Supporting Actor (Guy Marchand). It was this unexpected triumph
that convinced Miller to persevere with his filmmaking career and
established him as one of France's most promising auteur filmmakers.
The film also marked the screen debut of the actress-singer Elsa Lunghini, who, five years later, became
a chart-topping singer in France at the age of 13.
On the face of it,
Garde à vue
would appear to be a pretty routine police procedural drama, with a
plot that has barely enough substance to fill out an average episode of
Columbo. But, as its story
demonstrates, appearances can be
very
misleading. Far from being a conventional crime drama, the film
is actually a dark and complex study in deceit and delusion, in which
the usual policier ingredients turn out be almost incidental to the
central drama. Scripted and directed with astonishing economy and
precision,
Garde à vue
is one of the most compelling French crime films of the 1980s, and
certainly one of the bleakest. Stephen Hopkins's 2000 remake,
Under Suspicion, which starred Gene
Hackman and Morgan Freeman, can scarcely hold a candle to this stylish
minimalist masterpiece.
What is most striking about this film is its apparent narrative
simplicity. Most of the film functions almost as a two-handed
stage play, in which the two opposing protagonists - police inspector
Gallien and his number one suspect Martinaud - act out the
psychological equivalent of a Mexican standoff. Stunning
performances from Lino Ventura and Michel Serrault, two of French
cinema's finest actors of the period, coupled with some remarkably
incisive screenwriting, render Gallien's mental tussle with Martinaud
utterly spellbinding. As the relentless mind games proceed, the
accused and his accuser draw us into some very dark places,
each chipping away at the other's implacable mask so that we may glimpse the psychological flaws
that lie beneath.  Is Gallien right to think that Martinaud is
the guilty man, or is he wilfully deluding himself so that he can score an easy victory to compensate for
his professional and personal failings? Does Martinaud see
Gallien's insecurity and is he playing on this for his
own advantage? Only one thing is clear in this battle of wills: each man appears to
need the other, but for what purpose...?
Just when the narrative reaches a seemingly irresolvable impasse another
character enters the fray - Martinaud's wife, magnificently portrayed
by Romy Schneider in her penultimate (and most enigmatic)
screen appearance - and things
take an even darker turn. Yet there is still one major plot
twist to come, and instead of the anticipated happy ending we are
hurled even deeper into the abyss. The expression that is carved
onto Ventura's well-worn features at the very end of the film perfectly
captures what the spectator feels - horror, consternation and
incredulity. The human psyche, we realise, is the one
mystery that can
never be
resolved - and Claude Miller will frequently remind us of this fact in
his subsequent films.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Claude Miller film:
Mortelle randonnée (1983)
Film Synopsis
In a small French town, two young girls are found raped and
murdered. The obvious suspect is a prominent lawyer,
Jérôme Martinaud, who is known to have been in the
vicinity of both killings when they took place. Convinced of
Martinaud's guilt, Inspector Gallien summons him to his office on New
Year's Eve and begins to subject him to an intense interrogation.
Martinaud's testimony is full of holes and contradictions and yet
Gallien is unable to wring a confession out of him. Martinaud
appears to fit the psychological profile of the killer but the evidence
against him is circumstantial and Martinaud is in no hurry to admit to
being a child killer. Just when the two men appear to have
arrived at a stalemate, Martinaud's wife presents herself at the police
station and makes some shocking revelations...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.