Film Review
For the better part of his career as a film director, André Cayatte
was an effective commentator on the the failings of the French judicial system,
to the extent that his legal-oriented films played a significant part in
influencing public opinion and bringing about the abolition of the death
penalty in France in 1981. By the 1970s, he had said all that he had
to say on the matter - in a powerful series of dramas that included
Justice
est faite (1950) and
Nous sommes tous
des assassins (1952). In
Verdict, Cayatte is re-treading
old ground and tries, perhaps a little too earnestly, to rework his valid
arguments against the death penalty as a dark, modern thriller. The
result is a compelling entertainment, but, more concerned with style than
substance, the film's moral subtext is somewhat less clear, and less convincing,
than in the director's earlier judicial dramas.
In his last-but-one role, Jean Gabin is looking distinctly worse for wear
as the committed judge who is driven, by concern for the well-being of his
kidnapped diabetic wife (an excellent Gisèle Casadesus), to gently
pervert the course of justice - and who can blame him when he is beleaguered
night and day by a laughably neurotic Sophia Loren? Since Gabin's
last screen turn would be a comedic one, in the distinctly lacklustre comedy
L'Année sainte (1976),
this was his last dramatic performance, and, despite the film's not entirely
convincing premise, it proves to be one of his finest. The moral dilemma
that Cayatte paints in none too subtle tones is powerfully rendered through
Gabin's typically restrained portrayal, which chillingly exposes not only
the flaws in the judiciary, but also the apparent ease with which the system
can be manipulated to achieve a wished-for outcome. Justice appears
to be what you want it to be, or rather what those who have the power want
it to be.
Although it fulfils its author's moral objective,
Verdict makes grim
viewing and is easily one of the director's more pessimistic films.
A well-constructed courtroom drama ends up as overblown melodrama - not the
considered conclusion we might have expected of a serious polemical filmmaker
of Cayatte's standing. (Compare this with the more measured ending to
Les Risques du métier
and you have no doubt which is the better film.) It is probably unfair
to accuse Cayatte of trading sobriety for populism, but
Verdict does
occasionally tip over into cheap sensationalism. There is a lengthy
nude sequence that, at the time, would have been considered pornographic,
and a shock ending that feels a tad gratuitous. Sophia Loren was presumably
given the lead female role to boost box office receipts, but her melodramatic
'Italian momma' histrionics are completely out of place in the kind of contemplative,
realist drama that Cayatte presumably envisaged. All that the film
has to say about the glaring inadequacies of the jury system is contained
in a damning sequence in which Gabin effectively convinces each and every
jury member that he is about to become complicit in cold-blooded murder.
Everything else is merely crowd-chasing superfluity.
© James Travers 2016
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Next André Cayatte film:
À chacun son enfer (1977)
Film Synopsis
André Léoni is put on trial for the rape and murder of his girlfriend
Annie Chartier, the daughter of a respectable middle-class couple. The
evidence against Léoni is pretty damning, but he protests his innocence,
knowing that if he is found guilty he is likely to be executed. One
evening, the judge leading the trial, Leguen, is visited by Léoni's
mother, Térésa, who begs him to intervene to save her beloved
son. Leguen refuses to be influenced in this way in what he knows will
be his last case before he retires. Not long afterwards, the judge returns
home to find that his wife Nicole has been abducted. Térésa
then contacts Leguen and tells him that his wife will be returned to him alive
only if her son is acquitted.
Concerned for his wife's health (she is a diabetic and needs regular shots
of insulin), Leguen has no choice but to cooperate with the kidnappers.
Fully aware that in doing so he is jeopardising his reputation, the judge
begins to show greater leniency towards the accused man, never missing an
opportunity to stress the weaknesses in the prosecution's case. Unwilling
to allow her husband to dishonour himself to save her, Nicole discards her
medicine and accepts her death. Oblivious to his wife's sacrifice,
Leguen takes time to point out to the jury the absurdity of what the French
legal system requires of them - to condemn a potentially innocent man to
death according to their gut instinct. This responsibility proves too
much for the jury and Térésa gets the verdict she wanted -
but at a far greater price than she bargained for...
© James Travers
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