Film Review
For most of his career, director Maurice Labro was content with turning
out routine comedies such as
Boniface somnambule (1951),
Monsieur Leguignon lampiste
(1952) and
La Route du bonheur (1953),
films that would doubtless have passed into obscurity were it not for
the presence of some iconic actors. Occasionally, Labro did rise
above the mediocre, and it was with his forays into thriller territory
that he most distinguished himself. Of these,
Le Fauve est lâché is
the most impressive, a slick, relentlessly paced polar, of the kind
that had become enormously popular in France by the end of the
1950s. A violent film for its time, with some fleeting bursts of
sadism, it anticipates the grittier, more action-oriented thrillers of
the following decade.
Scripted by one of France's leading crime writers, Frédéric Dard,
(with some help from debutant scenarist Claude Sautet),
Le Fauve est
lâché was a box office hit (attracting an audience of 2.5
million) which cemented the popularity of its lead actor, Lino Ventura.
The latter first made his name as a wrestler before he was reluctantly manoeuvred into an
acting career by Jacques Becker for his landmark thriller
Touchez pas au grisbi
(1954). Looking every inch a seasoned habitué of
le Milieu, Ventura readily became
closely associated with the French
film
policier, and would spend most of his career playing hardened
criminals or driven detectives, usually with the spectator firmly on
his side. It was as a maverick agent in Bernard Borderie's
Le Gorille vous salue bien
(1958) that Ventura became a star of French cinema, and in Labro's
thriller, the next film he appeared in, he takes on a virtually
identical role. The film's title - which translates as The
Wildcat is Unleashed - was highly apt.
Le Fauve est lâché
deserves to be considered a minor classic of its genre, but it does have
one glaring deficiency: a formulaic plot which is almost identical with
that of Labro's previous film,
Action
immédiate (1957), the first of his Coplan
action-thrillers. Some top secret defence documents have gone
amiss and it is Ventura's job (whether he wants it or not) to recover
them. Some ruthless hoodlums (including an implausibly butch Jess
Hahn) are after the precious papers and are willing to resort to any
means, even kidnapping Ventura's infant son, to recover them.
Originality is evidently in short supply on the narrative front but,
presumably inspired by his more talented contemporaries, Labro grabs it
with both hands and somehow turns it into a wonderfully entertaining
noir rollercoaster, with Ventura at his pugnacious best.
The film gets off to a cracking start, with our friend Lino coerced by
his former security services buddies into playing James Bond one last
time. Ventura's first task is to gain the confidence of a crime
boss Paul Frankeur, another actor who excels in this kind of
hard-boiled crime romp. When Frankeur is unceremoniously dumped
at the film's midpoint, the pace suddenly picks up and before we know
it Ventura is waging a personal war against the security services and a
gang of American gangsters, the kind who like to pass their time
throwing people off cliffs. This takes in a spectacular set-piece
chase across Étretat on the Normandy coast, which includes a
breakneck chase through some caves that feels like more than a passing
nod to Carol Reed's
The Third Man (1949).
The direction is brisk and confident, the production values hard to
fault, with Pierre Petit's brooding cinematography and Georges Van
Parys's ominous score adding to the tension and drama, in classic noir
style. The film tapers off a little towards the end as the plot
starts to run out of mileage and credibility, but, with Ventura still
firing on all cylinders, ably supported by a cast that includes the
stunning Estella Blain, it is unlikely to send you to sleep. Au
contraire,
Le Fauve est
lâché is one of the liveliest and most competently
realised French thrillers of the decade. Formulaic it may be, but
dull it certainly isn't.
© James Travers 2015
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