Film Review
Marseille, 1956. The actor Robert Hossein had just completed work
on Jules Dassin's
Du rififi chez les hommes when
he readied himself for the premiere of his directorial debut,
Les Salauds vont en enfer.
This was Hossein's first adaptation of a Frédéric Dard
novel, to be followed by
Toi le venin,
Les Scélerats and
Le Monte-charge. At the
time, Hossein was somewhat disappointed by the reaction he received from a
reserved public. It cannot be denied that the approach adopted by
Hossein, an odd mix of violence and eroticism, was unusual for the time,
and in retrospect the film appears to be some years ahead of its time.
Les Salauds vont en enfer
tells the story of two escaped prisoners who hate each other and who
will find more than they bargained for when they hit the road
together. Supervised by veteran film director Georges Lampin
(who directed Hossein in
Crime et châtiment (1956))
and filmed in three separate parts - the prison, the escape and the death
triangle - this respectable French film noir explores various facets of
human behaviour, including passion, love, rivalry, friendship, moral
conflict and feminine wiles.
Hossein's first film is imaginatively directed and photographed, with a
dramatic score as befits an old-fashioned crime drama. It is no
surprise that the French-Russian actress Marina Vlady (Hossein's wife
at the time) was given the part of the temptress Eva. After
André Cayatte's
Avant le
deluge (1954), this was her second important film. Not
always appreciated by the public, Marina Vlady would later prove her
versatility, in dramatic and lighter roles. Handsome leading man
Henri Vidal had just completed work on
Le
Port du désir (as Jean Gabin's co-star) when he was
approached by Hossein to play one of the leading characters in his
film. His easy-going presence and imposing persona made him the
ideal choice for the part of the misogynous murderer Pierre Macquart.
Having become a familiar face in cinema through such notable French
classics as
Les Portes de la nuit,
Les Amants de Vérone,
Manon
and
Casque d'or, the gifted actor
Serge Reggiani, who was used to playing tragically fated young men, was
cast in the role of the traitor Rudel. The supporting cast
includes Robert Dalban, Lucien Raimbourg, Jacques Duby, Marthe
Mercadier and Robert Hossein himself.
Les Salauds vont en enfer may not
be a masterpiece but it attracted an audience of 62,500 and has just
been brought out on DVD. See it if you can!
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Robert Hossein film:
Les Scélérats (1959)
Film Synopsis
Macquart and Rudel are two hardened criminals who are serving life sentences
in a secure prison from which escape seems to be impossible. The execution
of another inmate, suspiciously denounced by one of his fellows, provides
the two convicts with the opportunity they have long been waiting for.
The funeral offers a perfect distraction, allowing Macquart and Rudel to
make good their escape in a van, although they have to kill two warders in
the attempt. Unable to believe their good fortune, they head south
as fast a possible and arrive at a suitably out of the way spot in Camargue.
Here, they come across a wood cabin which will provide them with a suitable
temporary refuge.
Unfortunately, the cabin is already inhabited - by a painter, who is quickly
disposed of, and his young model, Éva, who makes an attractive adornment
to the makeshift abode. Seeing that the strangers are armed and
dangerous, Éva makes a show of cooperating with them, but in doing
so she does her best to play them off against each other. The two convicts
plan to resume their journey in the painter's jeep, but Éva has other
ideas. The area around the cabin is strewn with patches of quicksand
that can pull a man to his death within seconds. Éva takes one
of the signs marking the position of such a danger spot and moves it further
down the beach. The trap is prepared. It will not have
to wait very long before it claims its victims...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.