Film Review
One of the most noticeable and gladly received American imports in
France immediately after WWII was the hardboiled crime movie, and in next to
no time home-grown filmmakers were turning out French imitations by the
cartload, such was the appetite for the nascent film policier
phenomenon.
Identité
judiciaire is one of the more respectable of these early
American-style thriller rip-offs, a meticulously constructed police
procedural that gives a modern Gallic twist to the recent spate of
realist films noirs being made in Hollywood at the time. As is
common in this thriller sub-genre, the murder mystery is far less
important than the slow and arduous process by which the mystery is
resolved.
In
Identité judiciaire
and films of its ilk we can clearly see the origins of all those
popular police procedural films and television series that would come
to dominate the small and big screens over the next three
decades.
Identité
judiciaire directly inspired one such series,
Les Cinq Dernières Minutes,
which ran to 56 episodes on French television from 1958 to 1973.
The central character in this series, Inspecteur Bourrel, was modelled
on the film's lead character, Commissaire Basquier, and was played by
the same actor, Raymond Souplex.
It is easy to see why Souplex was chosen to effectively reprise his
role as the no-nonsense police inspector in
Les Cinq Dernières Minutes.
His natural air of authority comes with more than a soupçon of
complacency and thuggish deviousness, making his Commissaire Basquier
an unpredictable and deeply flawed individual, a refreshing change from
the conventional crime-fighting hero. Basquier's investigation to
track down a serial killer gets off to a bad start when his actions
directly result in the death of a teenage girl. Later on, he
allows another young woman to fall into the killer's hands because he is
too busy going up a blind alley, and then, clearly not one to learn
from his mistakes, he puts a third woman in peril when an attempt to
corner the killer goes badly awry. Basquier may get his man in
the end, but only by following a long, winding itinerary piled high with
corpses.
Although director Hervé Bromberger is better known for his
subsequent thriller parody
La Bonne Tisane (1958),
Identité judiciaire is an
altogether more superior film of his, more stylishly photographed and
directed with far more flair and imagination. The film drags a
little with its succession of office-bound scenes, but it comes to life
with a vengeance when the action moves out onto the streets of
Paris. There's a hair-raising car chase as the narrative
accelerates towards its dramatic climax, and the frantic manhunt which closes
the drama is flawlessly executed. Best of all is the
shock revelation of the killer's identity - almost guaranteed to make
you leap out of your seat in surprise. It's attention-grabbing
jolts like these that allow us to forgive
Identité judiciaire its
narrative hiccups and you are left wondering why the film (one that
spawned one of France's most successful television series) isn't held
in the same regard as other notable French thrillers of the 1950s.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When 17-year-old Denise runs away from home, the police make haste to
find her. They arrive too late. She drowns herself in a
canal, the third casualty of a dangerous psychopath who drugs his victims
and either abandons them or murders them. As Inspector Basquier
begins his investigation a likely suspect emerges - the drugs dealer
Petrosino. The latter frequents a bar run by a young woman named
Dora, who is the killer's next victim. As she regains
consciousness in hospital, Dora cannot testify as she has no
recollection of the attack. The drug administered to her by the
killer not only paralyses, it also causes memory loss. Dora
recalls some vital clues when she is questioned by the lawyer Berthet,
but as she does so she signs her own death warrant...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.