Film Review
In many ways,
Le Professionnel
(a.k.a.
The Professional)
exemplifies the hard-edged, action-oriented thriller that had come to
dominate French cinema by the early 1980s, a close cousin of its
American counterpart which had proven so popular throughout the 1970s,
on both sides of the Atlantic. By this time, the policier genre
was on the cusp of losing its appeal in France, so to retain their
audiences producers and directors had to resort to ever-more fantastic
plots and increasingly extravagant action sequences, both of which are
very much in evidence in
Le
Professionnel, the most successful French film of its kind in
the 1980s.
This feisty knuckle-duster of a film was the third collaboration
between director Georges Lautner, who was better known for his thriller
parodies, and iconic actor Jean-Paul Belmondo, who had attained the
height of his popularity, having seen off his nearest rival, Alain
Delon. Belmondo's previous outings with Lautner -
Flic ou voyou (1978) and
Le Guignolo (1979) - had been
thrillers with a strong comic undercurrent.
Le Professionnel was an altogether
different beast, a gritty action thriller, with some savagely realistic
fight scenes, a spectacular car chase (something that had become
de rigeueur in Belmondo's films
since the early 1970s) and an ending so grim that you can hardly take
it in. There are some lighter moments but overall it's a much
darker film than we tend to associate with either Lautner or Belmondo.
The film is based on the novel
Death
of a Thin-skinned Animal by the British writer Patrick
Alexander, which was first published in the UK in 1976 and subsequently
reprinted in France as
Mort d'une
bête à la peau fragile in Marcel Duhamel's
'Série noire'. The latter series of crime novels provided
a rich vein for the French film policier, and no fewer than thirteen of
Belmondo's films originated from them, most notably Jean-Pierre
Melville's
Le Doulos (1962), Jean-Luc
Godard's
Pierrot le fou (1965) and
François Truffaut's
La Sirène du Mississippi
(1969). It was Belmondo, supported by his publicity agent, who
came up with the title
Le
Professionnel, and they had a hard job convincing Lautner and
his producer Alexandre Mnouchkine to go with it.
At a time of shifting allegiances between France and its former
colonies, the film was highly topical and it serves as a dark satire on
the kind of 'realpolitik' that was to prove toxic for several French
governments in the 1970s and 80s. The reputation of French
president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing was damaged by his decision
to send troops into the Central African Republic in 1979 to oust its
leader Jean-Bédel Bokassa, having previously supported his
regime and (allegedly) received gifts of diamonds from Bokassa.
Giscard d'Estaing's defeat in the French Presidential Election in May 1981
would have been fresh in everyone's mind when
Le Professionnel was released in
October of that year.
Lautner originally gave the task of adapting Patrick Alexander's novel
to his longterm screenwriting associate Michel Audiard, but it soon
became clear to Lautner and Mnouchkine that his heart was not on the
job. At the time, Audiard was busy writing the dialogue for
another prestigious film, Claude Miller's
Garde à vue
(1981). So dissatisfied was Lautner with the original script for
Le Professionnel that he hired
Francis Veber to redraft it. When he saw the revised script,
Audiard was far from impressed and disowned it, insisting that his son
Jacques should take his credit on the film.
The Achilles heel of
Le Professionnel
is, unsurprisingly, its total sinker of a script. When every
character is a two-dimensional caricature, when the plot is so
implausible and contrived that it disintegrates as soon as you start to
analyse it, and when a totally unrestrained Belmondo resorts to playing
the macho superhero yet again, the film cannot help resembling a
juvenile comicbook. With a mere twenty million francs at his
disposal, Lautner performs a remarkable salvage job, bringing a similar
gusto and gritty realism to that which had rendered his previous
thriller
Le Pacha (1968) so
successful. Henri Decaë, one of the best cinematographers in
the business, works his usual magic, bringing a dynamism and almost
mesmeric beauty to the film that more than compensates for its obvious
scripting deficiencies.
Decaë's skill is most in evidence in the brutally realistic
prologue, where he succeeds in making Camargue in southern France (the
most exotic location Lautner could afford) look like the back of beyond
in central Africa. The action scenes are particularly
well-choreographed, and it is almost worth watching the film just for
the hair-raising car chase (reminiscent of that seen in Peter Yates'
Bullitt)
which culminates on the steps of the Trocadéro, in front of the
Eiffel Tower. To make this remarkable sequence a reality,
Belmondo asked his father, the sculptor Paul Belmondo, to use his
influence as a member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts to obtain
the necessary authorisation. It pays to have friends in high
places.
In essence,
Le Professionnel
is really nothing more than an urban spaghetti western, something which
is made apparent in its key scene - the climactic duel between Belmondo
and his nemesis Robert Hossein, an obvious nod to Sergio Leone's
A Fistful of Dollars
(1964). This impression is reinforced by the film's score,
supplied by Leone's composer of choice, Ennio Morricone. The
enigmatic main theme,
Chi Mai
(which is Italian for
Who Ever)
had originally been written for
Maddalena
(1971), a Polish film directed by Jerzy Kawalerowicz, and was
subsequently used for the BBC television serial
The Life and Times of David Lloyd George,
broadcast in Britain in the spring of 1981. The theme became a
hit single in the UK and it was when he heard it played on the radio
that Belmondo decided to borrow it for his next film (it later became
the telephone on-hold music for his production company).
Although Lautner and Belmondo both had reservations about
Le Professionnel (mainly on account
of the substandard script) it was to prove their most successful
collaboration. The film attracted an audience of 5.2 million
spectators in France and enjoyed similar success in other European
countries. This was Belmondo's third biggest commercial success,
topped only by
Le Cerveau (1969) and
L'As des (1982). Despite
its glaringly obvious shortcomings (a plot that doesn't stand up to a
second's close scrutiny, some laughably bad acting and a painful dose
of female sexploitation),
Le
Professionnel redeems itself with its striking visuals and a
gripping (and wonderfully tongue-in-cheek) denouement. It's far
from being Lautner's best film and Belmondo's performance here rates
well below his best, but it's not too difficult to see why the film was
box office dynamite, and why it continues to be one of Belmondo's most
popular films. It's all down to the couscous gag...
© James Travers 2013
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Next Georges Lautner film:
Attention! Une femme peut en cacher une autre (1983)