Film Review
Alain Corneau's blockbuster remake of the 1966 gangster thriller
Le Deuxième souffle
makes a courageous stab at an alternative visualisation of the film
noir aesthetic but is so torn between bold experimentation and bald
cliché that it ends up looking more like a hideous parody of the
Jean-Pierre Melville classic instead of the intended
homage. The film may have a stellar cast and a budget that
most French filmmakers can only dream of, but, drunk on its own
soulless artiness and with a runtime of two and half hours, this second
adaptation of José Giovanni's novel is the mother of all ordeals
to sit through.
Corneau's reputation rests largely on the noir-style thrillers that he
made early on in his career - stylish classics such as
Police
Python 357 (1976) and
Le Choix des armes
(1981). These films were noted for their gritty realism, taut
screenplays and intense performances. If Corneau had made his
Le Deuxième souffle in a
similar style it would have been a far more attractive prospect.
Instead, presumably influenced by the latest trends in Asian cinema, he
uses an extreme form of stylisation, based on excessive colour
saturation, which not only diminishes the realism but also makes the
film extremely uncomfortable to watch. Had this been a ninety
minute movie this arty gimmickry may not have mattered so much, but for
a 150 minute long epic Corneau is probably expecting far too much from
his audience.
The film's needlessly heavy stylisation is at least partly redeemed by
some superbly choreographed action sequences and strong performances
from at least some of the big name actors in the cast list, a cast list
which reads like a distilled
Who's
Who of French cinema. Daniel Auteuil is
surprisingly good as the tough introspective gangster Minda, a much
darker kind of role to the ones he is known for playing. There
are also some impressive supporting contributions, from the likes of
Nicolas Duvauchelle and Philippe Nahon, but many of the star performers
fail to shine much brighter than a low energy light bulb running off a
flat car battery. Monica Bellucci, Michel Blanc and Jacques
Dutronc are either miscast or just couldn't be bothered to earn their
enormous paycheques. It is hard to know which is the bigger turn
off, the ugly over-saturated photography or the casting of so many
A-list actors who don't appear to give a damn.
Whilst Alain Corneau deserves some credit for seeking to pump fresh
blood into the dried out veins of a well-worn genre, the end result is
so imperfect that you wonder if the exercise was worth while. In
his version of
Le Deuxième
souffle, Jean-Pierre Melville crafts an existentialist thriller
of immense power and subtly, one which rewards both the eye and the
intellect. By contrast, Corneau's film is little more than a
shallow half-hearted gangster film which tries, a little to hard, to
conceal its manifest weaknesses through some excessive and totally
misguided stylisation. The film may impress some with a taste for
the outrageously avant-garde, but true devotees of the French policier
are better off sticking with Melville's
Le Deuxième souffle, one of
the greatest films of its genre.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Alain Corneau film:
Crime d'amour (2010)
Film Synopsis
In the late 1950s, Gustave Minda, known to all as Gu, is one of France's
most notorious hoodlums, but the law catches up with him in the end.
Arrested, he is given a life prison sentence but he manages to escape and
is soon on the run again. He plans to flee to another country far away
and begin a new life, accompanied by Manouche, the woman he loves.
But for this he needs a large amount of money, and as his own resources are
non-existent he must resort to yet another criminal exploit.
The hold-up comes off exactly as Gu planned, but as he makes his escape he
has no inkling of what lies ahead of him. Superintendent Blot has resolved
to capture the crook by any means at his disposal, and by leading Gu's criminal
associates to think he is a police informer he has hit upon a sure-fire way
to bring about his downfall. But Gu is a far more determined adversary
than Blot had bargained for. To regain his honour, the gangster is
prepared to go to any lengths...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.