Film Review
The 1970s was the decade of the French film policier, so it's hardly surprising
that Claude Lelouch would pass up the opportunity to clamber aboard this audience-grabbing
bandwagon and give it his own inimitable makeover. After
La Bonne année (1973),
now considered one of his best films, the director turned his hand to
Le
Chat et la souris, a mischievous take on the popular whodunit genre with
enough twists and turns to please any murder mystery addict. Lelouch's
penchant for the absurd and a decidedly warped sense of humour prevent this
from being a routine thriller, and the result is easily one of his more entertaining
and surprising films.
In what was to be her cinema swansong, Michèle Morgan bows out in
suitably glamorous style, apparently pushing a badly aged Jean-Pierre Aumont
to his death in the film's cheeky opener, before being hounded to distraction
by Serge Reggiani (a cop who has the tenacity of Lieutenant Columbo and temperament
of a Rottweiler) and his trusty sidekick Philippe Léotard. Vernon
Dobtcheff earned his place in film history as the man who shot Madame Morgan
in the back in her last cinema role. Fortunately, this was not quite
the end for the lady in question. Michèle Morgan made cameo
appearances in a few films after this (including one in Lelouch's subsequent
Robert et Robert), and
finally took her leave in a number of made-for-television films in the 1990s.
It is hardly overstating things to say that
Le Chat et la souris's
main asset is its mind boggling cast. Morgan may have already decided
to give up film acting but there's no sign of disillusionment with her art
here - she is as magnetic and iconic as ever as the lustrous lady of mystery,
the ice-cold blonde who leads Reggiani a merry dance as he does his audition
piece for Peter Falk's replacement (he even brings along his own pet pooch,
a totally lethal Belgian sheepdog). After a protracted lull in his acting
career, Reggiani was now in the throes of a massive comeback and is as riveting
to watch as his glamorous co-star - indeed it is the sparky interplay between these
two extraordinary actors that is the film's chief delight. No less
enjoyable is Reggiani's buddy rapport with up-and-coming talent Philippe
Léotard, an actor who would make a huge impact on French cinema in
the 1980s, notably in the hard-boiled policier genre. Some of the film's
most authentic scenes are those which, apparently improvised, show Reggiani
and Léotard enjoying each other's company, forming as memorable a
duo of maverick cops as you can care to name.
A Claude Lelouch film would not be a Claude Lelouch film without at least
one attention grabbing mega-indulgence, and
Le Chat et la souris has
one of the best. To break Morgan's alibi Reggiani undertakes three
high-speed journeys across Paris - by car, by motorbike and by speedboat -
and in each case Lelouch places the camera on the front of the vehicle in
question and subjects his audience to one of the most exhilarating joyrides
cinema has given us. In plot terms, it is purely gratuitous - no way
is it
remotely possible that Michèle Morgan could bomb her
way down the Champs-Élysées at sixty miles an hour on a motorbike
in the rush-hour (although I'd pay good money to see her try) - but it allows
Lelouch to concentrate his madness in contained spurts instead of infecting
the entire film. If you suffer from motion sickness, just close your
eyes and listen to the running commentary provided by Reggiani and Léotard
- this offers an amusing insight into the mentality of the Parisian cop (what
a revelation it is to find that they are there to enforce the law, not obey
it).
Anticipating the advent of néo-polar (France's own particularly cynical
kind of political thriller), Lelouch takes a swipe at the governing class
with a Machiavellian subplot in which high-up political intervention hijacks
a perfectly straightforward murder and turns it into anarcho-syndicalist
plot to rid France of its most well-heeled citizens. This is the icing
on the cake - a daft satirical digression built around a superb repeat gag
in which various individuals (a loose-canon cop, his more compliant replacement
and finally an arrested criminal) are successively press-ganged into serving
the government's anti-socialist, pro-bourgeois agenda. Michèle
Morgan and Serge Reggiani are not the only ones playing cat and mouse in
this quirky thriller - behind the scenes a much bigger game is in play, one
involving far higher stakes and a far less certain outcome. If Jean-Pierre
Aumont's killing was meant to symbolise France's demise in the mid-1970s
the film's resolution is savagely ironic.
© James Travers 2016
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Next Claude Lelouch film:
Le Bon et les méchants (1976)
Film Synopsis
Madame Richard entertains the prospect of murdering her husband when he,
a successful architect, begins an extra-marital affair with an actress of
erotic movies. Fortunately for her, she has an apparently cast-iron
alibi when her husband is killed at their house just outside Paris - she
was at the cinema and could hardly be expected to undertake the two hour
round trip that would have been necessary for her to commit the murder.
Police superintendent Lechat isn't so sure and, convinced that Madame Richard
did indeed shoot dead her husband, he sets out to break her alibi, without
success. Since several valuable paintings were stolen from the Richards' house
at the time of the murder it looks likely that the architect was killed by
burglars.
Another possibility is that Richard may have committed suicide, but Lechat
rejects this hypothesis and, assisted by his loyal subordinate Pierre Chemin,
he persists in hounding his prime suspect, Madame Richard. Not long
after she receives a cheque from her insurance company for the theft of the
paintings, Madame Richard is abducted by two masked men and forced to hand
over the insurance money. Lechat's investigation soon brings him into
conflict with his superiors, who have him taken off the case so that they
can make Richard's death and his wife's subsequent abduction look like the
work of left-wing extremists. Even in retirement, Lechat refuses to
give up the case. Still certain of Madame Richard's guilt, he sets
out to demolish her alibi once and for all...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.