Film Review
Director Gilles Béhat's second film after his debut feature
Haro (1978)
is this amiable romantic comedy-drama which helped to establish Richard Berry as a star
in the French cinema firmament in the early 1980s. Berry would later take
the lead in Béhat's subsequent film
Urgence (1985),
which is far more typical of the director's output, a gritty thriller
in the neo-polar line. The cast list includes some other notable French actors who were
near the start of their careers - Arielle Dombasle, Christopher Lambert and Ticky Holgado.
Even though
Putain d'histoire d'amour is
intended to be in a lighter vein than Béhat's grim policiers,
it has some distinctly noirish passages
and seems desperately to want to grow up and become a full-blown film noir.
Jean Bany's play
Neuf was the inspiration for the film's
somewhat muddled narrative, which is all the better for its unexpected digressions
into black comedy. To its credit, the film avoids the cloying sentiment-tweaking that
mars many a romantic comedy-drama of this era but it is somewhat
chaotic, with characters thinly sketched and a plot that is all
over the place. Richard Berry's sympathetic presence just about holds
it all together and the result is an enjoyably tongue-in-cheek
variation on the mid-life-crisis theme.
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Taxi driver Paul is addicted to gambling. When his colleagues offer him a bet to ferry
a customer across Paris in record time he accepts without hesitation. The wager
backfires and he loses a job - again. Unable to break the news to his wife,
Rose, he passes the evening in a casino where he fritters away what little money he has
left. Then he meets Eva, an enigmatic striptease artist, who shares his passion
for gambling...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.