Re: Holiday Films
Posted: December 24th, 2022, 8:59 pm
Five-and-a-half years ago, I attended a French film noir festival in Santa Monica where Bertrand Tavernier was a guest and introduced the films. One of the offerings was this gem. What I wrote then follows:
Tavernier introduced the final film of the day, the seldom-screened LE MONT-CHARGE aka PARIS PICK-UP (Marcel Bluwal 1962). The movie was met with scathing reviews upon release and thereafter ignored, much to Tavernier’s chagrin. Bluwal was, before and after, a prodigious director of TV movies; this was his first of only three feature films. The backstory: Bluwal signed with Gaumont, a giant of French studios, to make the movie. Francois Truffaut urged him not to work for Gaumont, contending that he needed to be free of such corporate influence. Bluwal replied that Gaumont was giving him complete freedom to cast, score and cut the film, and that there was nothing more he could want. Truffaut responded that he and his friends would ravage or ignore the film in their reviews. Bluwal then made the film for Gaumont, and the reviews ranged from horrid to nonexistent.
The movie is marvelous. A newly released convicted murderer (Robert Hossein), who had killed his wife’s lover, has a chance meeting with a woman and her three- or four-year old daughter on Christmas. They go to her apartment – a living space in her husband’s factory. After some music and a drink, they leave. Upon their return, they see her husband’s hat and coat. She calls his name. No response. On the sofa, his dead body…a suicide. Hossein panics. Given his past, the last place he needs to be is by a dead husband. Into the night. He goes to Mass. He sees the woman. She passes out. She is attended to by a man. He takes her to her apartment. Hossein follows. As do twists, turns, and intrigue.
Outstanding performances by the three major actors. Hossein is becoming my favorite French noir male actor – after Jean Gabin – thanks to my exposure to his work through these French noir festivals. The directing is tight with nary a wasted shot. I envision a home double feature this coming Merry Christmas – BLAST OF SILENCE (Allen Baron 1961) and this. And a Happy New Year!
Tavernier introduced the final film of the day, the seldom-screened LE MONT-CHARGE aka PARIS PICK-UP (Marcel Bluwal 1962). The movie was met with scathing reviews upon release and thereafter ignored, much to Tavernier’s chagrin. Bluwal was, before and after, a prodigious director of TV movies; this was his first of only three feature films. The backstory: Bluwal signed with Gaumont, a giant of French studios, to make the movie. Francois Truffaut urged him not to work for Gaumont, contending that he needed to be free of such corporate influence. Bluwal replied that Gaumont was giving him complete freedom to cast, score and cut the film, and that there was nothing more he could want. Truffaut responded that he and his friends would ravage or ignore the film in their reviews. Bluwal then made the film for Gaumont, and the reviews ranged from horrid to nonexistent.
The movie is marvelous. A newly released convicted murderer (Robert Hossein), who had killed his wife’s lover, has a chance meeting with a woman and her three- or four-year old daughter on Christmas. They go to her apartment – a living space in her husband’s factory. After some music and a drink, they leave. Upon their return, they see her husband’s hat and coat. She calls his name. No response. On the sofa, his dead body…a suicide. Hossein panics. Given his past, the last place he needs to be is by a dead husband. Into the night. He goes to Mass. He sees the woman. She passes out. She is attended to by a man. He takes her to her apartment. Hossein follows. As do twists, turns, and intrigue.
Outstanding performances by the three major actors. Hossein is becoming my favorite French noir male actor – after Jean Gabin – thanks to my exposure to his work through these French noir festivals. The directing is tight with nary a wasted shot. I envision a home double feature this coming Merry Christmas – BLAST OF SILENCE (Allen Baron 1961) and this. And a Happy New Year!