Film Review
Two years after Jacques Becker's
Les Aventures d'Arsène Lupin (1957),
Robert Lamoureux reprises the role of the famous gentleman thief, this time under
the capable direction of Yves Robert.
Signé Arsène Lupin is
very different to Becker's film, and not only because it is photographed in
artfully atmospheric black and white rather than garish colour.
Even though he is played by the same actor, the Lupin of Robert's film is
a somewhat more sinister and mercurial figure, much closer to the character in Maurice
Leblanc's original stories. That said, there is still a yawning chasm between Leblanc's Lupin
and Lamoureux's portrayal - the actor is just too suave and genteel ever to
be completely convincing as Lupin, although he fits the part somewhat
better than Jules Berry in
Arsène Lupin détective (1937)
and Romain Duris in
Arsène Lupin (2004).
Signé Arsène Lupin was the third film that Yves Robert (previously
a busy actor) directed, following the likeable comedies
Les Hommes ne pensent qu'à ça (1954)
and
Ni vu, ni connu (1958).
Robert's skill as a director is evident although the film owes just as much to the
witty script from Jean-Paul Rappeneau, who also had some success as a director
with such films as
Cyrano de Bergerac (1990)
and
Le Hussard sur le toit (1995).
Rappeneau's penchant for plot and character contortions helps to make this
Arsène Lupin's best screen outing to date. In the original Leblanc novels,
Lupin is a figure whose identity is constantly changing - you never really know
who the thief is. In Robert's film, the identity of Lupin is stolen from him
and he is forced to play detective to regain it. It is a nice twist which
helps to disguise the fact that the film is much nearer to Sherlock Holmes than to Arsène
Lupin. After this amiable little film, Yves Robert would go on to direct his first box office smash,
La Guerre des boutons (1962).
© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Yves Robert film:
La Guerre des boutons (1962)
Film Synopsis
After World War I, the French gentleman thief, Arsène Lupin, emerges from his convalescence
in a hospital to resume his criminal activities. Unfortunately, somebody else has
already embarked on a series of Lupinesque crimes, even going so far as to sign one of
his crimes with Lupin's name. Whilst investigating who his imitator is, Lupin
discovers a dastardly plan to steal a priceless state treasure which he is duty bound
to foil.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.