Film Review
In the 1970s, the 'polar' or mystery thriller, was one of the mainstays
of French cinema, and the most prolific director of the genre
was Jacques Deray.
Be it classic gangster films such as
Borsalino (1970)
or traditional policiers like
Flic Story (1975),
Deray brought panache, energy and intelligence to a popular genre that helped to ensure the polar
never lost its audience-pulling potential. Based on
The Velvet Well, a novel
by John Gearon,
Un papillon sur l'épaule
is one of the more unusual and sophisticated of Deray's thrillers,
a Kafkaesque scenario along the lines of a neo-polar, where the threat
comes not from gun-toting hoodlums but mysterious shadowy figures
who appear to be pulling the strings from a distance and
whose identity we can only guess at.
Deray's films almost invariably featured an iconic actor (usually Alain Delon
or Jean-Paul Belmondo) in the lead role, and this one is no
exception. As the hero who is led a merry dance by an unseen adversary
Lino Ventura is an excellent casting choice, bringing depth and
authenticity to a part that could so easily have looked like a cardboard
cut out. Ventura is an actor we can instantly engage and
throughout the film we can feel his character's growing frustration
and derangement as he is drawn deeper and deeper into a labyrinth of intrigue.
With a script provided by Jean-Claude Carrière (a frequent contributor to Luis Buñuel's
later films, such as
Belle de jour (1967)
Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie (1972))
and a sterling cast at his disposal (including Jean Bouise, an essential ingredient of
any good neo-polar), Jacques Deray could hardly have failed to make
this one of his stand-out films. The camerawork and lighting,
helped by Claude Bolling's haunting score, create a palpable
mood of entrapment which heightens the tension and the sense that
Ventura is being led by invisible hands towards a gruesome end.
Un papillon sur l'épaule isn't just one of the more
stylish French thrillers of the 1970s, it is also one of the
most disturbing - far more satisfying than Deray's
subsequent Belmondo bashes
Le Marginal (1983)
and
Le Solitaire (1987).
© James Travers 2006
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Deray film:
Trois hommes à abattre (1980)
Film Synopsis
Arriving in Barcelona to meet up with his wife, Roland Fériaud checks into a hotel
and is surprised to find a dead man in the room next to his. The next thing
he knows is regaining consciousness in a deserted rest home, attended by a doctor who
asks him a series of bizarre questions. Returning to the hotel, Fériaud meets
the wife of the dead man; she gives him the key to a left luggage locker, just before
she too is killed, in a road accident. When his wife is kidnapped, the now totally
perplexed Fériaud receives instructions from a mysterious telephone caller to hand
over a briefcase...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.