Film Review
L'Invité de la onzième heure begins with an interesting
premise worthy of H.G. Wells but then foolishly squanders it on what ends
up being no more than a second rate murder mystery, the kind of unimaginative
whodunit that Agatha Christie might knock out in an odd hour or two between
breakfast and lunch for one of her drearier short story anthologies.
Jean Tissier's presence in the cast was presumably intended to lighten the
mood of the film and make his character a less likely murder suspect, but
the actor's untamed histrionics and general all-round silliness pretty well
undermine both of these objectives. For most of his career, Tissier
could be relied upon to add charm and lustre to many a second-rate film,
but here is merely aggravating as a reporter posing as an amateur sleuth.
Roger Pigaut, Junie Astor, Blanchette Brunoy and Guillaume de Sax, all very
capable actors, are equally ill-served by a lacklustre and pretty transparent
script, which Maurice Cloche directs without any real flair or the least sign
of enthusiasm. Prior to this Cloche had had a fairly mundane career,
turning out routine comedies and melodramas like
Ces dames aux chapeaux
verts (1937) and
Le Petit chose
(1938), but after the war he would garner acclaim for his far more impressive
films devoted to notable benefactors of mankind. Most memorable of
these is his remarkable 1947 biopic
Monsieur
Vincent, which received an Oscar.
The real stars of
L'Invité de la onzième heure are
undoubtedly the atmospherically lit sets, which cannot help calling to mind
Dr Frankenstein's iconic laboratory in
James
Whales' classic horror films for Universal Pictures in the early 1930s.
In just about every other respect, the film is a massive let down, sadly
one of Cloche's least worthy offerings.
© James Travers 2014
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Next Maurice Cloche film:
Monsieur Vincent (1947)
Film Synopsis
Dr Rémi Lambert is a distinguished inventor who is inordinately proud
of his latest creation - a machine that is capable of reading human thoughts.
Realising the revolutionary possibilities of his invention, he invites his
fiancée, along with several friends and relations, to his laboratory
one day so that they can witness a demonstration. Among the assembled
guests is a journalist named Christophe Berri. Later that evening, Dr
Lambert is found dead, apparently have been murdered by one of his houseguests.
Feeling he is the man best equipped to solve the mystery, Berri takes charge
of the murder investigation, not knowing that the scientist has one last trick
up his sleeve. Before the guests depart his diabolical invention will
reveal the identity of the killer...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.