Film Review
As producer, director, star and co-writer, Alain Delon makes an adequate job of this largely
conventional French thriller. Although hardly a classic, this film is kept interesting
by the twists and turns in the story. As in many gangster movies, elements of loyalty,
honour and trust are thrown in; elements that are not that common in real underworld life.
Delon plays his normal cool and detached self, but his charm and timing means that
he can get away with it. Being in charge of the movie enables him to enjoy plenty of action
and bed-to-bed women. He also makes effective use of his co-stars. François
Périer could not be more of a Mafia don if he tried and Pierre Mondy delivers a
lively Columbo-like performance as his police counterpart. Anne Parillaud makes
an appearance, some years before Luc Besson's
Nikita made her a star.
This film
is a battle of wills and generations: old veterans Ruggieri and Rouxel trying to manipulate
Darnay into handing over the diamonds; Darnay using both sides to his own advantage; and
a younger group of crooks led by Sauvat (Gérard Herold) killing off his friends
and resources in order to trap him into a corner. Look out for Richard Anconina
as the young foot soldier whom Darnay shoots in the leg. Anconina was to make an
early career as shifty but sympathetic underworld types in this and other films like
Tchao pantin (1983) and
Police (1985).
Alain Delon dedicated
this film to René Clément, a director with whom he had worked with previously.
He also makes some veiled references to
Le Samouraï (1967), the movie that brought
him stardom: when Darnay meets Mignot in a disused flat it looks very much like that of
Jeff Costello (the character played by Delon in
Le Samouraï
). Delon affectionately pats the old fridge, and there's even a close-up
of Costello's birdcage.
Le Battant was
also part of a mould-breaking period in the early 1980s. As Delon points out in
the film, French censor laws meant that sources of entertainment such as comics and films
always had to show the thieves and crooks losing in the end. But times are always
changing, even censors. Does an anti-hero qualify as a villain? In the end, Darnay the
thief and killer gets away in spite of the efforts of Rouxel the cop.
© Mark Treuthardt 2007
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Next Alain Delon film:
Pour la peau d'un flic (1981)
Film Synopsis
A fortune in diamonds is stolen and the jeweller killed. Petty crook Jacques Darnay
is jailed for the crime. Released on parole eight years later Darnay is well aware that
he is being tailed by police and gangsters alike, both sides wanting to recover the loot.
The consensus is that Darnay committed the robbery but not the murder. Unanswered questions
include: where did Darnay get his information? who killed the jeweller? and where are
the diamonds? Darnay returns to Paris, intending to pick up the diamonds and flee
the country. But then his closest friends are killed and gang boss Gino Ruggieri
hesitates in helping him. Times have changed: a new and more ruthless breed of crook has
emerged. Meanwhile, everyone around Darnay is being killed off, which means that
police chief Rouxel is also onto him.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.