Film Review
Georges Lautner was the third film director to adapt Georges Simenon's novel
Les
Inconnus dans la maison. After Henri Decoin's masterful
1942
version (which starred the acting legend Raimu
) came Pierre Rouve's lacklustre
Stranger
in the House, released in 1967 and starring James Mason. In updating the
original novel to a contemporary setting, Lautner manages to lose much of the atmosphere
and psychological depth of Simenon's work, so whilst the film is competently made, it
is essentially little more than a conventional court room drama. Far from being
the action hero of previous decades, the ever charismatic Jean-Paul Belmondo still dominates
the film and gives what is most probably one of his better film performances. The
actor's real life sister, Muriel Belmondo, appears in the film, playing his cousin.
© James Travers 2005
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Georges Lautner film:
Arrêtez les tambours (1960)
Film Synopsis
Since his wife committed suicide ten years ago, Jacques Loursat, a once
renowned lawyer, has lived the life of a recluse, dousing his sorrows in
alcohol and self-pity. He shares his large empty house with his teenage
daughter Isabelle and a housekeeper, but he scarcely has a word to say to
either of them. On returning home one evening, Loursat hears a sudden
gunshot and then catches a fleeting glimpse of someone running away.
To his surprise, he finds a young man he has never seen before lying dead
in one of his rooms, apparently shot through the heart.
The criminal investigation soon gets underway and the dead man is identified
as a drugs dealer, Joël Cloarec. The most likely suspect is Isabelle's
boyfriend, Antoine Manu, who had a clear motive for murdering Cloarec.
Loursat is the only person - other than his daughter - who is unconvinced
of Manu's guilt. Unable to sit by and see an innocent man convicted,
he decides to come out of retirement to take charge of Manu's defence.
At first, from the testimony of the witnesses, the case against Manu appears
pretty damning, but then, in the course of Loursat's meticulous investigation,
another possible suspect emerges...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.