Film Review
Although it is now largely (and justifiably) overlooked by most film enthusiasts,
Le
Tigre aime la chair fraiche occupies an important place in Claude Chabrol's film-making
career. After a promising debut in the late 1950s with
Le Beau Serge,
in which he effectively spearheaded the French New Wave, Chabrol soon
ran into difficulties when his films failed to attract
audiences. With the spectacular failure of
L'Oeil du malin (1962)
and
Landru
(1963), he lost the confidence of his producers and his career as a director could well
have ended then and there if it were not for an offer from Gaumont to make a mainstream spy film.
Chabrol took up the offer willingly and was tasked with making a film in the series of
“Gorilla” spy films, following
La Valse du gorille (1959)
and
Le Gorille a mordu l'archevêque (1962), with
Roger Hanin reprising his role as the agent known
as “The Gorilla”. When the rights to the Gorilla series were suddenly withdrawn,
Chabrol was still keen to make a film in the same style - as was Hanin, who decided to
write a script under an assumed name (Antoine Flachot). The resulting film,
Le
Tigre aime la chair fraîche allowed Hanin to continue playing the kind of role
he enjoyed most - a sophisticated, slightly masochistic action hero, effectively a Gallic
version of James Bond.
Although it nows appears extremely dated and a tad unsophisticated,
this film and its sequel
Le
Tigre se parfume à la dynamite were very much in tune with what was popular in France
at the time. They proved to be a box office success - allowing Chabrol to win back
the confidence of his producers and thereby secure his future as a mainstream filmmaker,
leading to more worthy films such as
Que la bête meure (1969)
and
Le Boucher (1970).
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Chabrol film:
Le Tigre se parfume à la dynamite (1965)
Film Synopsis
Baskine, the Turkish ambassador, arrives in Paris to sign an important trade agreement,
allowing Turkey to buy a sophisticated new war plane from France. Immediately, he
is the target of an unknown assassin and special agent Louis Rapière (a.k.a. 'The
Tiger') is assigned to protect him. During a failed assassination attempt at the
opera, the ambassador's daughter Mehlica is kidnapped. Discovering that the enemy
is in truth the ambassador's own secretary, Koubassi, the Tiger attempts to rescue Mehlica…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.