Film Review
1968 was an eventful year for France. In the dying days of the De
Gaulle presidency, the spirit of revolution was in the air and the
appetite for far-reaching social reforms had never been greater.
In that memorable spring of 1968 the country came perilously close to
civil war, with widespread demonstrations and a brief period of civil
unrest that saw almost a quarter of the population go on strike.
It was a dramatic time, with old resentments and new concerns for the
future brimming over as France teetered on the brink of outright
chaos. In no other film of this traumatic year is this sense of
impending social breakdown more strongly evoked than in Philippe
Fourastié's
La Bande à
Bonnot, one of the most violent films to be screened in French
cinemas before the relaxation of the censorship rules in the 1970s
(evidenced by the fact it was released with an 18 certificate).
Boasting a top-notch cast (Bruno Cremer, Jacques Brel, Annie Girardot
and Jean-Pierre Kalfon) and an alarming body count, the film recounts,
in graphic detail, the murderous exploits of one of France's most
notorious criminal gangs, the so-called Bonnot gang. Motivated by
anarchist anti-bourgeois ideology, this formidable gang of
trigger-happy hotheads embarked on a fierce campaign of murder and
pillage across France and Belgium at the time of the Belle
Époque before being brought to justice in 1912. This was
the first gang to make use of the motorcar, which gave them an
immediate advantage over the police who still went about on horseback
and bicycle. The Bonnot gang's main claim to fame is that
it was the first gang to use a car as a get-away vehicle, after robbing
the Société Générale Bank in Paris.
The gang's activities resulted in a huge crackdown by the authorities
against anarchists and their sympathisers and a massive overhaul of
policing in France.
Whilst Fourastié's film plays fast and loose with historical
fact and makes next to no attempt to understand the psychology of
Bonnot and his partners in crime, it does provide a harrowingly
true-to-life sense of the scale and impact of the Bonnot gang's reign
of terror. The characterisation is generally weak and sheds
little light on the personality and motives of the criminals, but the
production values are excellent. On the plus side, the film
offers an authentic reconstruction of France circa 1911 and its
spectacular action scenes (the high point being the climactic showdown
between the gang and the police) are choreographed with immense
dramatic and visual flair. It prefigures the increasingly
realistic retro-gangster films that would be made in France over the
next decade, most notably Jacques Deray's
Borsalino
(1970).
La Bande à Bonnot is to
French cinema and culture pretty well what Arthur Penn's
Bonnie
and Clyde (1967) is to their American counterparts.
Both films were born out of and reflect the burgeoning counter-culture
movement in their respective countries, each reflecting the incendiary
anti-authority, pro-freedom ethos of a disenchanted, openly rebellious
generation. Fourastié's film may not attain the lyrical
power of Penn's film but it is just as evocative of the revolutionary
mood that so vividly coloured the final years of the 1960s and endured
into the mid-1970s.
Unlike Penn, who can be legitimately charged with romanticising the
exploits of Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, Fourastié makes no
attempt to cast his murderous gangsters as heroes. From the
outset, they impress us as misguided social outsiders, who surrender
their legitimacy as a force for social good as soon as they pick up a
gun and start shooting at people. We have no sympathy for any
member of Bonnot's gang, least of all for Bonnot himself, who,
portrayed by Bruno Cremer at his most demonically chilling, comes
across not as a committed revolutionary but as a cold-hearted killer
intent on waging a private war against the whole civilised world.
Unlikely as it may seem, this was the second of only two films that
Philippe Fourastié directed for the cinema. Previously he
had worked as an assistant to some of the leading lights of the French
New Wave (Chabrol, Rivette and Godard) before making his directing
debut with
Un choix d'assassins
(1966). He concluded his directing career in 1972 with a serial
for French television entitled
Mandrin.
On
La Bande à Bonnot,
Fourastié was assisted by Claude Miller, a former production
manager for François Truffaut who later became a significant auteur in
French cinema. The adventures of Jules Bonnot and his gang also
featured in a popular French television series of the 1970s,
Les Brigades du Tigre, which would
be remade in 2006 into a
film
of the same title, directed by Jérôme Cornuau.
Fourastié's film is less significant as a biographical account
of Jules Bonnot and his gang than as a stark evocation of the
tumultuous period in which it was made.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1911, a group of hard-line anarchists - including
Raymond-la-science, Garnier, Carouy, Soudy and Marie la Belge - give up
their peaceful struggle against the bourgeoisie and, led by Jules
Bonnot, become a gang of desperate armed criminals. Doggedly
pursued by Jouin, one of the Sureté's top men, the gang embarks
on a campaign of terror across France, killing people in the street and
raiding banks. Stealing motorcars to assist them in their war
against the bourgeois capitalist system, Bonnot's gang evades justice
for a while, but eventually the law is bound to catch up with them...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.