Film Review
Les Brigades du Tigre is the
latest in a number of big budget films to have been made in France
recently which are re-makes of classic French television series.
After
Belphégor (2001),
Vidocq
(2001) and
Arsène Lupin (2004), it
is now the turn of the hit crime series
Les Brigades du Tigre, broadcast
between 1974 and 1983, to get the glitzy millennium makeover
treatment. The recipe is simple and requires next to no talent or
imagination. Hire the biggest name actors you can afford.
Spend the equivalent of the Gross Domestic Product of Luxembourg on
sets, costumes and special effects. Crowbar in as many action
sequences as possible, using as much theatrical blood as you can,
whether the plot requires it or not. Of course, the film (if one
can call it that) will be totally lacking in dramatic coherence and
will have as much artistic merit as a bowl of cornflakes, but if you
put enough effort into marketing, you should recoup the production cost
and make enough of a profit to finance the next riotous expedition into mediocrity.
As they say in France: Les doigts dans le nez.
Unlike most of its predecessors, this particular revamp does have
something going for it. As a pacy adventure thriller it just
about delivers the goods (even if this is somewhat undermined by the
unjustifiably long runtime). The action scenes are well
choreographed, well shot and edited with some degree of flair. To
its credit, the film also has something resembling a plot.
Admittedly, it is a plot whose synopsis you would be hard pressed to
get onto five pages of foolscap and is as labyrinthine and murky as the
London sewage system, something that would challenge the powers of
concentration of a mathematical genius with the cerebral wherewithal of Stephen
Hawking.
The film also has an attractive cast, although it's a shame that not
one of the big name actors who were roped into this production with a
bank account busting fee felt obliged to give even a half-decent
performance. Maybe they, like the audience, were so bewildered by
the script that they hadn't the faintest idea what they were
doing. Olivier Gourmet, in particular, looks completely lost, as
though he wandered onto the wrong set one day and no one bothered to tell him. Crass comic book dialogue
such as "You won't stop history", "I will stop yours"
doesn't exactly inspire histrionic excellence, but that hardly excuses
the completely characterless performances from the likes of Clovis Cornillac and Edouard
Baer...
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1907, to counter the rising tide of violent crime in France, a
special police unit known as the Mobile Brigade is set up by the Home
Office minister Georges Clemenceau (a.k.a. The Tiger). In 1912,
the unit is assigned to investigate a street hold-up in which the only
thing stolen is a seemingly innocuous account book belonging to Cagne,
a man tasked with managing state loans to Russia. Led by
Commissaire Valentin, the officers of the Tiger Brigade succeed in
tracking down and killing the men involved in the robbery, including
their leader, Bonnot. The latter was both lover and fellow
conspirator of Constance, the wife of the Russian Prince
Radetsky. She is implicated in an anarchist plot to effect social
great social and political change in Russia by weakening the country's
relationship with France. Concerned that the activities of
the Tiger Brigade may harm the Triple Entente which is due to be signed
between Russia, France and Great Britain, the conventional French
police, acting for the government, intervenes to halt the
investigation. Unfortunately, this leaves the anarchists free to
achieve their aims, beginning with the assassination of Prince
Radetsky...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.