Film Review
Eddy Matalon is probably best known for a series of music videos he made
with Brigitte Bardot at the height of her fame in the mid-1960s. He
is also known as a director of genre films, most notably the crime dramas
Blackout (1978) and
Sweet Killing (1993). It was when
the French New Wave was in full throttle that Matalon made his directing
debut, with
Le Chien fou, a film which looks all too obviously like
someone throwing himself and everything he owns onto this particular passing
bandwagon. Stylishly modern though the film undoubtedly is, it is unapologetically
derivative, with a plot that performs a shameless smash and grab raid on
just about every decent American film noir thriller of the 1950s, particularly
those of the ultra-hard-boiled variety.
Matalon clearly had the time of his life turning out the ultimate noir pastiche
and giving it a massively over-egged Nouvelle Vague gloss, complete with
an outrageously over-the-top jazz soundtrack that soon becomes unbearable.
It would be so easy to write
Le Chien fou off as a mere exercise in
wild self-indulgence but there are still plenty of good reasons for watching
the film. For one thing, Matalon makes very good use of his charismatic
lead actors - Claude Brasseur and Dany Carrel - even if both are criminally
ill-served by a script that looks as if it was spit out by a machine afflicted
with an imagination bypass. For another, the director's evident enthusiasm
more than makes up for his lack of originality and talent, and in some parts
of the film he brings a genuine flair to what is otherwise a tediously run-of-the-mill
gangster romp.
There is a painfully glaring mismatch between the film's visual artistry
and its poorly paced second-hand narrative. The latter weighs down
the entire production with predictable plot twists and pointless longueurs
that are excruciating to sit through. What keeps us watching are the
seductively involving noir visuals, with night-time Paris literally transformed
into a suffocatingly dark labyrinth of crime from which there is no escape.
There are some striking similarities with Jean-Pierre Melville's
Le Samouraï (1967), one obvious
point of connection being the police dragnet and subsequent chase through
the Paris Metro. It is also worth mentioning that midway through the
film there is an admirably well-choreographed car chase sequence that prefigures
Peter Yates'
Bullitt (1968) - some
years before such a thing became an essential ingredient of any French or
American crime thriller. The tense closing sequences owe much to the
classic denouement of Carol Reed's
The
Third Man (1949), and in this part of the film Matalon does finally
show his worth as a thriller director.
The sweet romantic interlude in which Brasseur and Carrel become acquainted
provides a welcome break from the relentlessly doom-laden nocturnal nightmare
in which Brasseur is enmeshed for the bulk of the film. This serves
to fully humanise Brasseur, making the latter part of the film far more poignant
and suspenseful than it might have been. Olivier Despax, a popular
singer of the time, provides the title song that allows Brasseur and Carrel's
seemingly ill-matched characters to connect in a way that feels jarringly
natural given the highly synthetic nature of everything else the film throws
up.
Le Chien fou is unlikely to be mistaken
for a classic of its genre, but it shows just how impactful the aesthetic
of the French New Wave was, at a time when the craze for posturing modernity
was at its most frenzied.
© James Travers 2022
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Late one night, a gang of Parisian thieves succeed in breaking
into a safe and laying their hands on a small fortune in diamonds.
Before they can make their escape, they are disturbed and in the sudden exchange
of gunfire one of the three receives a severe bullet wound. Marc, the
most sympathetic of the thieves, insists that they take the badly bleeding
man to a doctor, but his accomplice refuses. When his stricken friend
dies, Marc shoots the third member of their gang dead and absconds with the
stolen jewels. His one thought now is to offload the booty for the
highest price he can get. Dissatisfied by the price offered by the first
receiver he contacts, Marc looks around town for a higher offer, but meets
with nothing but treachery and violence wherever he goes.
In the end, one of Marc's criminal contacts robs him of all but one of the
jewels, and he is left roaming the city aware that he is a target for the
trigger-happy associates of his dead partners in crime. He has a chance
encounter with an attractive young woman named Marie, and when they hit it
off Marc begins to see a brighter future for himself in a far away country.
To pay for his flight from Paris, he contacts the owner of the stolen jewels
and offers to return them in return for a large cash payment, the exchange
to take place at a crowded station on the Paris Metro. Marc narrowly
avoids being caught in a police trap, but before he can make good his escape
he is chased across the city by the police and gangsters, both with a score
to settle. The thief manages to shake off his police pursuers but he
is ultimately cornered by a merciless team of hoodlums who clearly intend
showing him no mercy.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.