Film Review
With
Le Doulos, French film
director Jean-Pierre Melville began his now legendary cycle of five
French gangster films which paid homage to the classic American film
noir thrillers of the past and which earned him his reputation as the
king of the French film policier.
Melville, an obsessively keen
devotee of American culture and cinema, had already made two films that
were influenced by classic film noir -
Bob
le flambeur (1955) and
Deux hommes dans Manhattan
(1959) - but these he considered more as social dramas than true
gangster films. With its obvious noir trappings, murky characters
and bleak existentialist undertones,
Le
Doulos sees Melville move into new, very distinctive territory -
a stylish gangster movie revolving around issues of
loyalty and deceit, recurring themes in the director's subsequent
oeuvre.
Of the five near-faultless gangster films that Melville made, between
1962 and 1972,
Le Doulos is
the grimmest and the most stylised. From the stunning opening
sequence, a seemingly endless tracking shot in which a solitary figure
(Serge Reggiani) walks along a shadowy walkway, looking like a
condemned man heading towards the scaffold, there is an all-pervasive
atmosphere of doom. The usual noir devices - confined, oddly
angled sets, harshly lit in a sinister expressionistic manner - create
a sense of entrapment and predestination. These impressions grow
into a harrowing certainty as the story builds towards its gripping
climax. Originating from the Série noire novel by
Pierre Lesou,
Le Doulos is
Greek tragedy recast as a beautifully composed homage to film
noir.
Whilst there is a gradual stylistic evolution across Melville's
gangster films, a slow drift away from the aesthetics of film noir
towards the more naturalistic and gritty approach that was more in
vogue at the time, there is an almost relentless consistency in the
ideas and themes that underpin these films. Melville's experience
of serving in the French resistance during WWII had made him
particularly sensitive to the value of friendship and loyalty.
The cynical view that, ultimately, no one is dependable, that everyone
has the potential to be a traitor, a collaborator, infects most of
Melville's films. The central protagonists in a Jean-Pierre
Meville gangster film are almost always ambiguous, taciturn anti-heroes
with fragmented identities who do little to betray their inner thoughts
and feelings.
Le Doulos
is an extreme case of this, since the characters' motivations
evidently change in the course of the film, altering how we regard
them and also preventing us from fully understanding them. A moment's
reflection on the possibility that the characters are deceiving us
prompts us to question where their true loyalties lie.
In these films, as in life, we can never be truly certain who we can trust.
Jean-Pierre Melville was the model auteur, self-taught and an outsider
to the highly regimented and largely studio-centric method of
filmmaking that was prevalent in France at the time he began making
films.
A forerunner of the French New Wave, he valued his
independence but was still bound by commercial constraints over which
he had little control. One of the requirements imposed on
Melville by his producers (Georges de Beauregard and Carlo Ponti) to
give
Le Doulos box office
appeal was the casting of a big name actor. Jean-Paul Belmondo
had enjoyed a meteoric rise to stardom since his appearance in Jean-Luc
Godard's
À bout de souffle (1959)
and was rapidly becoming an icon of French cinema. Melville had
employed him on
Léon Morin, prêtre
and was keen to work with him again. Unfortunately, like many
actors, Belmondo found Melville a very hard taskmaster, since he was
required to give a restrained and controlled performance, with none of
the freedom to improvise that he relished. Belmondo and Melville
reportedly had a very difficult working relationship, and yet, despite
this, many regard
Le Doulos
as one of Belmondo's best screen performances. Instead of the
familiar grinning action man, the actor projects a completely different
screen persona - an enigmatic trench-coat-wearing hoodlum with a cool
streak of vicious malignancy.
Belmondo's is not the only great performance in this film. Serge
Reggiani brings a dark brooding presence to his gangster portrayal -
Melville saw him as a descendent of the character that he had
previously played in Jacques Becker's
Casque
d'or (1952). Appearing briefly in the film's beginning
is René Lefèvre, an actor who was hugely popular in the
1930s, perhaps best remembered for his leading role in René
Clair's
Le Million (1931). Other
names that should be familiar to French film aficionados are Jean
Desailly, Michel Piccoli and, making his film debut, Philippe Nahon.
This is far more than a straight pastiche of classic film noir -
it has an unmistakably French character to it.
Nicolas Hayer's moody cinematography brings a subtly Gallic
twist to the familiar film noir iconography. Melville goes to
great lengths to recast the Paris setting as New York, but his
cinematographer cleverly undermines this and leaves us in
no doubt that the film is set in France, the chic, vibrant France of the early 1960s.
Hayer even reuses some of the devices he had previously
employed on H.G. Clouzot's
Le Corbeau (1943), such as the
swinging lamp, an appropriate allusion to man's treacherous dual nature.
In common with much of Jean-Pierre Melville's work,
Le Doulos was criminally neglected
in the decades that followed its initial release but recently it has
come to be regarded as a classic of its genre and a masterpiece of
French cinema. Many gangster films were made in France in the
1960s, but few, if any, come close to matching the technical excellence
and stunning visual quality of this film. Despite its intensely
pessimistic tone, ambiguous characters, outbursts of misogynism and
apparent lack of a sure moral perspective,
Le Doulos is a mesmerising
piece of cinema - grim and chilling, and yet thoroughly compelling.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Jean-Pierre Melville film:
L'Aîné des Ferchaux (1963)