Film Review
Former critic Pascal Bonitzer is the latest French filmmaker to cash in
on the recent craze for Agatha Christie murder mysteries in France,
following the example of Pascal Thomas, who gave the Queen of Crime a
quaintly Gallic makeover with
Mon petit doigt m'a dit...
(2005),
L'Heure zéro (2007) and
Le Crime est notre affaire
(2008). Bonitzer's film is an updated version of the Christie
novel
The Hollow, first
published in 1946 and released in France under the title
Le Vallon. Whilst
The Hollow is the archetypal
Christie novel (a classic country house whodunit), it suffers from two
major flaws: the belated inclusion of Hercule Poirot as an unnecessary
deus ex machina and a dismally
lacklustre ending. Christie herself regretted using Poirot in the
novel and excised him from her subsequent stage version. Bonitzer
and his screenwriter Jérôme Beaujour rectify both of these
flaws and bring a satisfying coherence to the narrative which Christie
herself would surely have approved of.
As has now become tradition (if not mandatory), this latest Agatha
Christie romp boasts a glittering big name cast that includes some of
the most highly regarded actors in French cinema, from favourite
perennials Miou-Miou and Pierre Arditi to such fragrant blossoms as
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi and Anne Consigny. The director's daughter
Agathe Bonitzer puts in an appearance, as does auteur diva Emmanuelle
Riva and Maurice Bénichou, the latter clearly relishing his part
as a French (and totally clueless) version of Lieutenant
Columbo. Italian beauty Caterina Murino brings a touch of
high class glamour to the proceedings and it is a shame that she, along
with an excellent Lambert Wilson, are dispatched with such unseemly
haste. But that's one of the inviolable rules of a Christie
mystery: the most interesting characters are always the ones that get
killed off first. As you would expect from such a distinguished
cast the calibre of the acting is the film's main selling point, and if
there are any awards going for the performances they should head in the
direction of Anne Consigny and Mathieu Demy for their suitably
ambiguous character portrayals.
Agatha Christie is not the only inspiration for the film. Pascal
Bonitzer clearly had Hitchcock in mind when he conceived the
suspenseful denouement which culminates in a gripping live-and-death
tussle on the rooftops of Paris (far better than the limp sitting room
ending of the original novel). Claude Chabrol is another obvious
reference, as the film is as much a deliciously barbed dark satire on
the bourgeoisie as it is a conventional whodunit. Here Bonitzer
shows a flair for direction that has been hard to detect in much of his
previous work, and even if he has a tendency to 'borrow' from others
more capable than himself his own style is at last beginning to take
form. Just as the pieces of
Le
Grand alibi finally come together like a jigsaw to form a
satisfying whole, so Bonitzer's own filmmaking identity is starting to
emerge.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Pascal Bonitzer film:
Cherchez Hortense (2012)
Film Synopsis
During a weekend break at the country estate of Senator
Henri Pages, Pierre Collier is murdered.
The obvious culprit is his wife, Claire, who is found at the
scene of the crime holding a gun. She certainly has good
reason to kill her husband, an inveterate womaniser. But, as
the police soon discover, things are hardly that simple.
The gun is not the murder weapon and virtually every one of the
guests staying at the house had a motive for killing Pierre...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.