Film Review
A year before Jean-Luc Godard performed his merciless deconstruction of
the French film policier in
Détective (1985)
director Jacques Bral undertook a similar exercise with
Polar, his immediate follow-up to
his acclaimed noir-tinted drama
Extérieur, nuit
(1980). Like Godard, Bral appears to have great fun toying with
the motifs and conventions of the policier genre, exaggerating the
familiar archetypes and plot devices to ludicrous extremes whilst
faithfully pastiching the kind of convoluted thriller nonsense that had
been so spectacularly popular in France for the past two decades.
Whilst it is somewhat less intellectually challenging than Godard's
film,
Polar is still likely to
give you a migraine if you try to follow the plot too closely - the
sanest way to approach it is as a wickedly wry parody that is not
intended to make sense.
The film is based on the novel
Morgue
pleine by the popular French crime writer Jean-Patrick
Manchette, whose work has frequently been adapted for French cinema -
for example: Claude Chabrol's
Nada (1973), Yves Boisset's
Folle
à tuer (1975) and Jacques Deray's
Trois hommes à abattre
(1980). Bral's faithful screenwriter Jean-Paul Leca retains the
mordant dark humour of Manchette's novel, as well as its labyrinthine
structure and first person narration, which pays a cheeky homage to
Raymond Chandler's crime novels.
The hero of the film is no resourceful Philip Marlowe but an inept
bumbling depressive named Eugène Tarpon, affectionately portrayed
by Jean-François Balmer. A
slovenly and lethargic near-relative of Mr Bean, Tarpon shambles
dizzily from one implausible plot development to another, so totally
out of his depth you wonder how he is ever going to make it to the end
of the film. Our hero is such an unexciting proposition that even
the story's femme fatale (Sandra Montaigu) cannot bear to share a bed
with him
au naturel and
fetches him a pair of pyjamas at the first opportunity. When he
is not being tormented by American-style hoodlums (one of whom bears
more than a passing resemblance to David Soul), Tarpon is harangued by
limpet-like police, who appear to have even less of an idea about what
is going than he is. To cap it all, he has a run in with a
director of pornographic films who looks scarily like Claude Chabrol
(probably because the character
is
played by Claude Chabrol). The plot thickens faster than quick
drying cement in an iron foundry during a heat-wave, and if you are not
totally confused out of your skull by the time the credits roll you
clearly haven't been paying attention.
Bral's
Polar and Godard's
Détective are so obviously
companion pieces that it should be almost mandatory to watch them
together. It is highly significant that the two films came along
at the time when the traditional French policier or polar had just
about run its course and was being abandoned both by filmmakers and
audiences. (Having virtually died out in the mid-1980s, the genre
would return with a vengeance two decades later.) What the
two films by Bral and Godard do is to expose the emptiness and utterly
contrived nature of the polar, to show that, once you have stripped
away the conventions, there is virtually nothing left. The
phenomenal success of the genre is hard to account for if we accept
that such films are nothing more than an accumulation of stock
clichés, the same familiar pattern repeated ad nauseum.
Watching Bral's film makes it clear that it is not the content that is
important, but rather the mise-en-scène, the unique stylisation
that a film director can bring to the film. A polar without
meaningful or original content is acceptable; one without style
and flair would be unthinkable.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
A disgraced cop, Eugène Tarpon, sets himself up as a private
detective, operating from his one room apartment in Paris. If
Tarpon had expected a stampede of clients beating a path to his door he
is soon disappointed. He is about to give up and return to his
home village when he is visited by an attractive but highly distressed
young woman named Charlotte who begs him to investigate the murder of
her best friend. Reluctantly, Tarpon accepts the case but before
he can reach the dead woman's apartment he is picked up by the police
and questioned as the obvious suspect for her murder. Not long
after he is released by the police, Tarpon is menaced by some
suspicious looking hoodlums, who abduct him and then release him for no
apparent reason. By this stage, Tarpon realises he has managed to
get himself caught up in a dangerous and complex affair. His
investigation leads nowhere, until Charlotte makes an unexpected
reappearance...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.