Film Review
Director André Cayatte devoted much of his career to attacking
injustices that were endemic in French society, not just deficiencies
in the legal system (something that Cayatte knew a great deal about,
being a former lawyer), but also more deep-seated failings in the wider social and
political sphere. In
La Raison
d'état Cayatte aims higher than he has ever done before,
condemning France's morally dubious arms industry and the dodgy
political manoeuvring that underpins it. At the time, a series of
high profile political scandals had shaken the French public's
confidence in the establishment, so films such as this, so-called
néo-polars, were enormously
popular. However sensational their plots were, they always
contained more than a grain of truth.
La Raison d'état
brazenly kicks the lid off one of the most scandalous aspects of
government activity, namely flagrant behind-the-scenes involvement in
the arms trade. The film's title is the excuse employed by
successive French governments to justify any despicable, morally
indefensible act they wish to keep from the public - anything it seems
can be justified in the 'interest of the state', even cold-blooded
murder. The Kafkaesque nightmare that the film's heroine (a suitably neurotic
Monica Vitti) is subjected to is all too believable, particularly as
Jean Yanne is so convincing as the Satanic functionary whose job it is
to protect the darkest of state secrets.
Cayatte does allow his enthusiasm to run away with itself, to the
detriment of the script which occasionally comes across as a didactic,
anti-establishment rant. The demarcation between good and evil is
more clearly established than in many of Cayatte's other films, and
consequently there is an unfortunate drift towards caricature. As
a result, the director somewhat undermines the force of his argument,
but not to the extent of weakening his compelling narrative. With
an excellent cast to support him, Cayatte makes an effective assault on
the double standards of governments that use a blinkered notion of
national self-interest as a justification for all manner of immoral
misconduct. Forty years on,
La
Raison d'état is still scarily pertinent.
Governments may come and go, but the same skulduggery goes on
forever...
© James Travers 2014
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Next André Cayatte film:
La Fausse maîtresse (1942)
Film Synopsis
Just as he is about to attend a conference in Italy, Professeur Marrot,
a world-renowned biologist, comes across a compromising document.
A committed pacifist who has long militated against the arms trade,
Marrot is delighted that the document contains incontrovertible
evidence that France, in particular a senior civil servant named
Jean-Philippe Leroi, was implicated in the deaths of 240 African
children. It appears that the plane which was transporting the
children was shot down by missiles which had been illegally sold by the
French government. Before Marrot can attend a press conference to
reveal his findings he is killed, his death made to look like a fatal
road accident. His Italian collaborator Angela Ravelli isn't
fooled by this deception, but how long will it be before she suffers a
similar fate at the hands of the French security services...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.