Film Review
Police Python 357 is the film that
established Alain Corneau as one of France's most promising young
directors in the mid-1970s. He had previously made just one film,
France société anonyme
(1974), which had also been well-received by the critics. For
French cinema, the 1970s was primarily the decade of the
policier, the Gallic variation on
the crime thriller. This developed out of the film noir style
polars of the previous two decades and drew inspiration from its
equivalent in American cinema. In the 1970s and early '80s Alain
Corneau made three very memorable films in this genre, of which
Police Python 357 is generally regarded as
the best. It is a slick, suspenseful thriller which boasts a
sophisticated script, imaginative direction, excellent cinematography
and superlative performances from its three lead actors.
In contrast to most policiers, which tend to be set in Paris, this one
is located in Orléans, the city where Corniaud grew up as a
child. The setting, with its haphazard mix of the old and the
modern, provides an appropriate backdrop for a tale in which order
breaks down and the lives of two seemingly unimpeachable police
officers unravel in the most chaotic manner, losing any meaningful
point of reference. Reality seems to disintegrate and we
find ourselves in what feels like an existentialist nightmare world of
the imagination, in which is played out a dark game of survival, where
all the moves appear to be made by some unseen malignant force.
The film has something of the essence of the neo-polar, except that
here the motivating evil is not some nebulous political or corporate
entity but the darker aspects of the characters themselves. In
case you are wondering, the film gets its enigmatic title from the Colt
Python 357, a powerful firearm that was standard issue to the American
police.
Police Python 357's main attraction
is Yves Montand, who gives one of his most compelling
performances. Here, partnered with another great actor,
François Périer, he plays a tough, morally ambiguous cop
who is poles apart from his other popular persona, that of the amiable
chansonnier. Montand appears in the film with his real-life wife,
Simone Signoret, with whom he had co-starred in a number of earlier
films, most notably Costa-Gravras'
L'Aveu (1970) and Raymond
Rouleau's adaptation of Arthur Miller's
The Crucible,
Les Sorcières de Salem
(1957). In a restrained yet highly effective performance,
Signoret provides the film with is emotional centre, giving a poignant
counterpoint to the sterile machismo that revolves around it,
propelling the male protagonists to their doom, or their salvation, in true
film noir fashion.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Alain Corneau film:
La Menace (1977)
Film Synopsis
Orléans police inspector Marc Ferrot leads a focused, solitary
existence. With no family and few friends, he devotes himself to
his work and his interest in firearms. One night, whilst snaring
a petty criminal, he encounters a woman, Sylvia, for whom he develops
an immediate fascination. Ferrot takes Sylvia as his lover,
not realising that she is also having an affair with his immediate
superior, Commissaire Ganay. When he learns that Sylvia is
deceiving him, Ganay kills her in a moment of passion. Following
the advice of his paralysed wife, Ganay takes action to cover his
tracks, not realising that in doing so he is implicating a
colleague. As Ferrot investigates Sylvia's murder he is surprised
to find that all of the clues point to him being the murderer...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.