Film Review
Touchez pas au grisbi occupies
a pivotal place in French cinema history. Not only did it allow
the actor Jean Gabin to win back his popular public following after a
decade that saw him fade into comparative obscurity, but it firmly
established the
film policier
as a major genre in France, a genre that would come to predominate in
French cinema for the next three decades.
When it was first
released,
Grisbi was a major
box office hit in France, drawing an audience of 4.7 million. The
reason for the film's popularity is easily accounted for. In the
early 1950s, there had been a great public demand in France for
American crime films, something which home-grown directors had
attempted to tap into with films such as
La Môme vert-de-gris
(1953), which kicked off the Lemmy Caution series (starring American
import Eddie Constantine). The French had acquired a taste
for hard-boiled thrillers and this voracious appetite for crime-based
escapism was about to be satisfied with a vengeance.
What distinguishes
Grisbi
from the early French gangster films of the 1950s is that it does not
attempt to slavishly emulate the American model, but instead shows us
recognisably French characters in an unmistakably French setting - true
French film noir rather than a bland copy of its Hollywood
counterpart. Along with two other classic gangster films that
immedately followed in its wake - Jules Dassin's
Du rififi chez les hommes
(1955) and Jean-Pierre Melville's
Bob
le flambeur (1955) -
Grisbi
provided the template for virtually all subsequent French crime
thrillers. The film is based on a novel by crime writer Albert
Simonin, the first in a trilogy of books featuring the character Max le
Menteur - the other two novels would later be adapted as
Le Cave se rebiffe and
Les
Tontons flingueurs. In case you were wondering,
grisbi is Parisian slang for
money (not to be confused with
Rigsby, a character in a popular British TV sitcom). One of the
most iconic ingredients of the film is its famous
Grisbi theme, played on
the harmonica by Jean Wiener and composed by Marc Lanjean. The
following year, the theme became a hit single (under the title
Le
Grisbi), performed by the celebrated jazz musician Aimé
Barelli.
In making this film, director Jacques Becker took his inspiration from
American film noir gangster films of the 1940s, adopting many of the
familiar film noir motifs but giving them a noticeable Gallic twist.
The extreme stylisation that most characterises American film noir is
toned down and used in a far more subtle manner in Becker's film,
something that gives it a chic modernity and far greater sense of
realism. Another significant departure from the classic American gangster film
is that
Grisbi
is far more concerned with character than plot. Had the film been
made in Hollywood, the heist which kicks off the story would doubtless
have been included as a major set-piece. Becker not only omits to
show us the heist but he introduces us to it almost
en passant, via a brief shot of a
newspaper article reporting the crime. The film is not about the
mechanics of crime, but rather about the psychology of those who make
their living by crime. The noir-style gangster trappings are
little more than window dressing for what is really an intelligent
exploration of universal themes: friendship, loyalty and the trauma of
growing old. The plot may take in a daring robbery and vicious
gang warfare, but what it is really about is a late middle-aged man
being forced to re-evaluate his life and decide what matters most to
him. Grisbi or not grisbi, that is the question.
There had been a long tradition of gangster films in French cinema
prior to
Touchez pas au Grisbi,
previous examples including such classics as Julien Duvivier's
Pepé
le Moko (1937), Marcel Carné's
Le
Quai des brumes (1938) and Maurice Tourneur's
Impasse des deux anges (1948).
What most sets
Grisbi apart
from its predecessors is its restrained, naturalistic approach, which
gives the film a modern edge and brutality not seen before. In
contrast to the crime films of the 1930s and 40s, the characters in
Grisbi are tougher, rougher and
appear far more habitués to the rough and tumble of gangster
life. The female characters hardly flinch when they are slapped
about by the men who think they own them (the most shocking thing about the film
when seen today), whilst the hoodlums handle machine guns as casually
as umbrellas and hardly think twice about torturing an opponent for
information. What makes the film's few bursts of aggression
appear all the more shocking is that they arise so casually and
unexpectedly. The stillness and elegance of Becker's
mise-en-scène gives the spectator a false sense of security,
making him or her totally unprepared for the visceral intensity of the
violence when it erupts. Maybe this is why the film's
dramatic climax, in which the two rival gangs confront one
another in explosive film noir fashion, is so effective and so memorable.
Touchez pas au grisbi is the
film that rehabilitated Jean Gabin after a period of decline and
allowed him to reinvent his screen persona. Gone forever was the
Gabin of the pre-WWII époque, the romantic working class hero
with matinee idol good looks and an aura of tragic vulnerability.
The new Gabin that we see in
Grisbi
is very different - older, quieter, far more imposing and yet
darkly introspective. This was Gabin Mark II - the patriarch, the
boss, you might even say the Godfather. For the rest of his
career, this is the kind of role that Gabin would be most comfortable
with, projecting an air of invulnerable and patriarchal self-reliance,
yet also conveying something of a man who is struggling to come to
grips with an inner existential crisis. The role of Max le
Menteur fits Gabin perfectly and allows the actor to give what is,
arguably, the finest performance of his post-WWII period.
Things might have been very different if Daniel Gélin hadn't
declined the role when it was first offered to him, thereby providing
Gabin with the biggest break of his career. Gabin was
awarded the Coupe Volpi for the Best Actor at the 1954 Venice Film
Festival for his role in
Grisbi
and Marcel Carné's
L'Air de Paris.
Not only did this film resurrect one screen icon (Gabin) it also
allowed another, Lino Ventura, to make an auspicious debut. Prior
to this, Ventura had pursued a successful career as a professional
wrestler, under his birth name Angelo Borrini. It was through a
chance encounter with Jacques Becker that Ventura landed the main
supporting role in
Grisbi (a
gangster named Angelo). Within a few years, Lino Ventura would
establish himself as the archetypal hard man of French cinema, almost
invariably cast as hardened gangster-types or redoubtable crime
fighters, thuggish characters who were the exact opposite to the
actor's true nature. Ventura and Gabin became the closest of
friends whilst making
Grisbi
and would work together on several other classic French films,
including
Razzia sur la Chnouf (1955),
Le
Rouge est mis (1957) and
Le Clan des Siciliens
(1969). Another leading light of French cinema, Jeanne
Moreau, also appears in the film, in one of her early glamour-puss
roles, along with Gabin's first wife Gaby Basset and Miss America 1946,
Marilyn Buferd.
Touchez pas au grisbi was not
only crucial in defining the
policier
genre, it also represents something of a transition between the old
quality cinema of the past and the new cinema that was about to break
through with the emergence of the French New Wave. Jacques Becker
was one of a handful of directors active in the late 1940s, early
1950s, who lay between the two camps represented by the old guard and
the young Turks, mavericks who made films that both presaged and
inspired the early offerings of the nouvelle vague. Becker's
Grisbi was particularly
influential, not only motivating his contemporary Jean-Pierre Melville
to devote much of his career to make films in the gangster genre, but
also providing the inspiration for notable noir-style thriller
offerings from two of the leading figures of the French New Wave,
Jean-Luc Godard (
À bout de souffle) and
François Truffaut (
Tirez sur le pianiste).
The obvious stylistic and thematic similarities between
Grisbi and most of the films
policiers made in France over the next two decades reveal how
extraordinarily influential Jacques Becker's film was. This was
to French film noir what
The Maltese Falcon and
Double Indemnity had been to
its American equivalent - a film that captured the Zeitgeist and
changed the landscape of cinema forever.
© James Travers 2001
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Next Jacques Becker film:
Les Aventures d'Arsène Lupin (1957)