Film Review
Le Gorille vous salue bien
(1958) made the then relatively unknown Lino Ventura a household name
in France, but Ventura was wise not to allow himself to be talked into
reprising his role in this film for the sequel that came along not long
afterwards,
La Valse du Gorille.
With his lead man out of the running, director Bernard Borderie needed
a replacement with a similar physique and taciturn charm, and this he
found in Roger Hanin, an actor he had first employed in a minor role on
his first Lemmy Caution film,
La Môme vert de gris
(1953). Hanin did not share Ventura's concerns over being
typecast and ended up reprising the role of Géo Paquet in the
third and final Gorilla film,
Le
Gorille a mordu l'archevêque (1962) before taking on a
virtually identical role in Claude Chabrol's two oft reviled
Tigre films.
Bernard Borderie began his career in the early 1950s by turning out
some fairly respectable pastiches of American noir thrillers, but by
the end of the decade inspiration was fast deserting him and
complacency could be seen to take its place. Despite being
elegantly photographed by Claude Renoir,
La Valse du Gorille lacks the pace
and artistry of Borderie's previous thrillers, and the convoluted,
far-fetched plot only makes these failings more apparent. The spy
thriller genre was a popular staple of French cinema in the late 50s,
but original plots were few and far between, so most resorted to
predictable storylines that had already been done to death.
Although based on one of Antoine-Louis Dominique's popular Gorilla
novels,
La Valse du Gorille
is shallow and tediously formulaic. Perhaps if Borderie had been
able to bribe Lino Ventura into the playing the lead character the film
might have had some enduing appeal, but with Hanin roped in as a poor
substitute it is plodding and charmless.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Bernard Borderie film:
Comment qu'elle est! (1960)
Film Synopsis
An international conference at which Professor Keibel is to present his
theory for a revolutionary new rocket system is sabotaged by German
agents determined to steal Keibel's discovery and sell it to the
highest bidder. The French secret service manages to recover the
stolen papers, but American agent Ted Parker succeeds in copying them,
hiding the microfilm in the toilets of a bar before he is
captured. Only one man can prevent Keibel's discovery from
falling into the hands of Russian, German, British and American agents
- Géo Paquet, otherwise known as The Gorilla...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.