Film Review
Le Désordre et la nuit is a fairly respectable example of the French film noir of the
late 1950s, although it falls somewhat short of the excellence
of earlier crime thrillers such as
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954) and
Du rififi chez les hommes (1955).
Across the 1950s, French film noir showed a marked migration
away from the more stylised approach inspired by American film noir of
earlier decades towards a more sophisticated, lighter, variation on the same theme.
The night clubs, trenchcoat wearing cops and gun-totting villains, femme fatales, prostitutes
are still there, but there is a greater emphasis on realism, in
both character and situation, as the genre
evolved into the classic French policier that we know and love.
The film was directed by Gilles Grangier, who mostly concerned himself with
mainstream comedies such as
La Cuisine au beurre (1963),
although he was also adept in the thriller genre. Among the thrillers that Grangier directed
are
Gas-Oil (1955)
and
Le Rouge est mis (1957), which
both starred Jean Gabin, the lead actor of
Le Désordre et la nuit.
The shock pairing of an ageing Jean Gabin and a near-adolescent Nadja Tiller
(paving the way for the former's subsequent liaison with Brigitte Bardot
in
En cas de malheur (1958))
is one of the things which makes this a memorable and enjoyable film. Gabin's loneliness and
disillusionment with his life is apparent, as is Tiller's vulnerability and need to be
loved.
Despite their age difference, the two actors have a genuine rapport which
provides the film with a feeling of humanity which is often lacking in French thrillers
of this period. Although she plays a lesser role in the film, Danielle Darrieux
is equally captivating when she finally appears.
Another defining characteristic of this film, and the thing which most gives it
a sense of modernity and energy, is the almost omnipresence of jazz music -
no doubt inspired by Louis Malle's
Ascenseur pour l'échafaud (1958).
Le Désordre et la nuit makes good use of its jazz star Hazel Scott,
whose presence with her jazz troupe at various interludes in the film
bring it to life with a vengeance.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Gilles Grangier film:
125 rue Montmartre (1959)
Film Synopsis
Inspecteur Georges Vallois is called in to investigate the murder of Albert Simoni, the
owner of a night club in Paris. The prime suspect is Lucky Fridel, a young German
woman who came to Paris to start a career as a singer. Vallois is seduced by Lucky and
ends up falling in love with her, although he discovers that she is a drug addict.
Intending to protect Lucky from the police, Vallois pursues his own private investigation,
realising that whoever is supplying Lucky with dope is very probably the person who murdered
Simoni...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.