Film Review
Inspired by the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963,
I... comme Icare exemplifies the
cynically minded political thriller, or néo-polar, that was
highly popular in France during the mid to late 1970s. At a time
when high-profile scandals and conspiracy theories were filling the
newssheets and fuelling a general disillusionment with rightwing
politics, films of this kind became very much a part of the national
Zeitgeist, hence the genre's popularity.
I... comme Icare takes paranoia to
a whole new level and draws heavily on the circumstances surrounding
the Kennedy assassination, particularly on the theory that the
president was the victim of a CIA plot, although the film's setting is
fictitious, a strange amalgam of France and the United States.
The failings of the Warren Commission (into the Kennedy assassination)
are gleefully highlighted in the film, and it is no accident that the
presumed assassin is named Daslow - an anagram of (Lee Harvey) Oswald,
the man who went down in history as the man who killed JFK, although
some believe he was a mere pawn in an elaborate CIA plot.
I... comme Icare was directed
by Henri Verneuil, one of France's most prolific and most well-regarded
mainstream filmmakers. Verneuil established himself in the early
1950s with his popular comedies, most of which featured the renowned
comic actor Fernandel, but it was not until the late 1960s that he came
into his own with his stylish American-style thrillers. His more
successful forays into the thriller genre include the superlative
gangster film
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969)
and the pacy action thriller
Peur sur la ville (1975), both
of which were major box office hits. Verneuil's later films
policiers are some of the most sophisticated to come before a
mainstream French cinema audience of the day and stand up reasonably
well next to more serious offerings from Jean-Pierre Melville, the
godfather of the French gangster movie.
The film is best-remembered for its main set piece, a meticulously
authentic recreation of the famous psychological experiments performed
by Stanley Milgram at Yale University in the early 1960s. The
experiments were intended to quantify various subjects' willingness to
submit to authority by putting them in a situation where there were
required to inflict pain (through electric shocks) on another
person. The results of the study were a revelation
(two-thirds of the participants were willing to subject their victim to
the maximum voltage shock) and went some way to explaining the part
played by ordinary men and women in such atrocities as the Nazi
holocaust. Although the sequence is only tangential to the
plot and could easily have been omitted (shortening the film by at
least 20 minutes) it is by far the most memorable part of the film as
it leaves the spectator pondering just what barbarous acts he would be
willing to commit, if the circumstances were right.
Whilst it is difficult to take some parts of
I... comme Icare seriously (some of
the plot contrivances are ludicrous in the extreme and stretch
credulity to breaking point), the film succeeds in holding our
attention by virtue of its compelling, cleverly constructed narrative
and a magnetic central performance from Yves Montand. The latter
is superb as the lone magistrate who, with Columbo-like persistence,
wades into a labyrinth of intrigue in a bid to unravel a fiendishly
well-orchestrated assassination. Having featured in several of
Costa-Cavras's political thrillers - notably
Z (1969) and
L'Aveu
(1970) - Montand fits the genre better than perhaps any other French
actor of this era, and brings a gravitas and humanity to the film that
makes the threat his character is up against seem particularly real and
disturbing. With a little help from a memorably creepy
score by Ennio Morricone,
I... comme
Icare is a masterfully woven thriller that still manages to
chill the blood, and leaves you wondering if we are not all mere cogs
in one great conspiracy.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Henri Verneuil film:
Mille milliards de dollars (1982)
Film Synopsis
The official investigation into the assassination of a popular head of state
concludes he was killed by a lone assassin, who shot himself immediately after
the event. It is a nice tidy outcome that appears to satisfy everyone,
particularly those in positions of power who have reason to fear the consequences
of a political killing for the country concerned. The official verdict
does not, however, convince the public prosecutor Henry Volney. Certain
elements of the crime trouble him and lead him to think there may be more
to the assassination than meets the eye. In an attempt to uncover the
truth, he embarks on a new investigation, although there is scant evidence
to guide him in his enquiries.
The only tangible piece of evidence that Volney can lay his hands on is
a short piece of film, lasting a few seconds, that was shot using a handheld
camera at the scene of the crime. Realising that the individual who
recorded this film is a valuable witness, the prosecutor sets out to find
him, but as he does so every person who connects him with the key witness
dies in mysterious circumstances. After nine possible witnesses have
been killed, Volney has good reason to think that someone is deliberately
trying to frustrate his investigation. Whilst searching the private
residence of Mallory, the head of the security services, he comes across a
tape recording with a coded message. This is Volney's first lead to
a conspiracy that goes by the name 'I comme Icare'. Grimly mirroring
the fate of the doomed aviator in the famous Greek myth, the prosecutor soon
finds he is getting too close to the truth...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.