|
|
The
Best of French
| |
Films policier
is a portmanteau term which refers to the crime-thriller genre
of French cinema, often in the context of trench coat wearing gangsters
and tough, ageing police inspectors. The polar is a specific
kind of policier which involves a central mystery (although a polar
does not necessarily have to be a policier).
The film policier developed in French
cinema from early attempts to emulate American film noir in the
1940s. The genre has passed through several phases (including polar,
neo-polar and, most recently, post-noir), but the
film noir origins
are almost nearly always recognisable.
The film policier invariably centres
around an outsider (a law-enforcer or a law-breaker) who assumes the moral
high ground and is engaged in a fight for survival against a mightier adversary.
If the central hero is not obviously indestructible (such as Inspector
Maigret, Lemmy Caution or virtually any character played by Jean-Paul Belmondo),
he will almost certainly perish in the last five minutes of the film.
It goes without saying that the hero is nearly always male, since
the world of the policier is inherently rough, bleak and male dominated.
Those directors who can be credited with
having mastered the film policier include: Henri-Georges Clouzot,
Jacques Becker, Jean-Pierre Melville, Henri Verneuil, Jacques Deray and
Georges Lautner. To this
list of luminaries, we should add Claude Chabrol and Costa-Gavras, who
have distinguished themselves in the related genres of psychological and
political thriller.
Here is a selection of the finest
thrillers in French cinema.
|
|
|
|
Henri Diamant-Berger (1936) |
|
Julien Duvivier (1937) |
|
Jules
Berry takes on the mantle of Maurice Leblanc's celebrated gentleman thief,
Arsène Lupin, in this whimsical comedy thriller.
|
|
|
Once
banned by the French authorities for being too depressing, Pépé
le Moko is now regarded as a masterpiece, a perfect blend of poetic
realism and film noir thriller, set in the Algerian Casbah.
|
Marcel Carné (1938) |
|
Marcel Carné (1938) |
|
The
apotheosis of poetic realism, the film starts with a suicide attempt and
ends with a revenge killing. Not much room for light relief in this
sombre drama from the Carné-Prévert team, other than some
sparkling repartee between Arletty and Jouvet.
|
|
|
Jean
Gabin plays a deserter hoping to start a new life but it all goes wrong
when he falls in love with the ward of a ruthless gangster. The pessimism
of the time is reflected in this film, a haunting tale of ill-fated love
from the masters of poetic realism.
|
Jean Delannoy (1939) |
|
Robert Siodmak (1939) |
|
A
gun-runner plays for the highest stakes in this atmospheric film noir
set
in the Far East. Delannoy's skilful direction is surpassed only by
Erich Von Stroheim's unforgettable performance.
|
|
|
Robert
Siodmak made this thriller-romance during his exile in Europe. The
influence of American film noir is very noticeable, and Maurice
Chevalier gives a fine performance.
|
Christian-Jaque (1941) |
|
Henri-Georges Clouzot (1942) |
|
This
intriguing murder mystery directed by Christian-Jaque was the first film
to be made in France under the Nazi occupation, something which lends the
film a grim double meaning.
|
|
|
Pierre
Fresnay and Suzy Delair sparkle in this comedy thriller, Clouzot's first
full-length film. Despite the comic situations, the plot, sets and
atmosphere are pure film noir.
|
Henri-Georges Clouzot (1943) |
|
Henri-Georges Clouzot (1947) |
|
This
"black diamond" of the Nazi occupation is now regarded as one of the finest
films made in France. Now seen as a brilliantly constructed suspense
thriller, its shocking depiction of a morally corrupt society angered many
when it was first released and it was soon banned.
|
|
|
Louis
Jouvet brings a much-needed humanity to Clouzot's dark suspense thriller,
which gives a rare insight into French music hall of the 1940s.
|
Henri Decoin (1949) |
|
Henri-Georges Clouzot (1953) |
|
You
could easily mistake Louis Jouvet for Humphrey Bogart in this very obvious
pastiche of American film noir, the template for the French polars
of the 1950s.
|
|
|
Clouzot's
best film out-does Hitchcock at almost every level, making this one of
the greatest suspense thrillers of all time. The film has a sustained
dramatic intensity which makes it a truly exhausting and harrowing
cinematic experience.
|
Jacques Becker (1953) |
|
Jules Dassin (1955) |
|
One
of the earliest and best examples of the crime thrillers which would dominate
French cinema in the following decades. Its origins in American film
noir are very apparent, particularly in the nocturnal photography,
the haunting music and the inevitable bloody shoot-out.
|
|
|
An
unashamed direct import of American film noir, this film became
a cult in it own time and is now regarded as one of the true masterpieces
of its genre. It is best known for the meticulously filmed jewellery
robbery, in which not a single word of dialogue is used.
|
Henri-Georges Clouzot (1955) |
|
Julien Duvivier (1956) |
|
An
extraordinarily compelling suspense thriller which, with its chillingly
macabre murder scene and nerve-shattering climax, remains a popular classic
with a very wide audience.
|
|
|
Julien
Duvivier's most cynical portrait of human nature is most noted for its
recreation of the Halles market in Paris and for Danèle Delorme's
shocking portayal of an unscrupulous gold digger.
|
Jean
Delannoy (1957) |
|
Gilles Grangier (1958) |
|
Obvious
references to American film noir make this a moody and claustrophobic
crime thriller, with Jean Gabin playing Georges Simenon's famous detective,
Inspector Maigret.
|
|
|
Although
the policier genre had by this stage become formulaic, this film
stands out by virtue of its attempts to embrace modernity, using jazz heavily
to portray a sleazy criminal underworld.
|
Louis Malle (1958) |
|
Yves Robert (1959) |
|
This
stylish variation on the popular policier genre gave an early glimpse of
the determination of fresh young directors to break away from the traditional
film form.
|
|
|
Arsène
Lupin returns to cinema, this time in the guise of Robert Lamoureux, in
a film which comes closest to capturing the style of Maurice Leblanc's
original Lupin novels.
|
Jean-Luc Godard (1959) |
|
Robert Bresson (1959) |
|
In
one of the most spectacular directoral debuts in film history, Jean-Luc
Godard gives new meaning and form to the medium of film in this bizarre
pastiche of the film policier.
|
|
|
This
compelling study in which a young man is consumed by an uncontrollable
desire to steal allows Bresson to develop his unique cinematography and
explore the themes of sin and redemption. A film with a rare silent
eloquence and humanity.
|
Jean-Pierre Melville (1959) |
|
Georges Franju (1959) |
|
This
film is less a traditional policier and more a homage to American film
noir. Melville himself plays both detective and director, leaving
no cliché unturned but somehow managing to create a work of art
from the familiar trappings of the genre.
|
|
|
The
most celebrated French fantasy horror film, and rightly so with its graphic
depiction of mad scientist surgery set in the creepiest house to make it
onto celluloid. Guaranted to give you nightmares.
|
Jacques
Becker (1960) |
|
René
Clément (1960) |
|
Becker's
final film is his best, an uncompromisingly hard-edged realist portrait
of a prison break-out attempt, offering a compelling study of human nature.
|
|
|
The
talented Alain Delon plays the original Mr Ripley in this sumptuous yet
chilling adaptation of Patricia Highsmith's thriller novel.
|
François Truffaut
(1960) |
|
Jean-Pierre Melville (1961) |
|
The
first and best of Truffaut's homages to the American crime thriller features
a sublime performance from Charles Aznavour.
|
|
|
Jean-Paul
Belmondo stars in this stylish mélange of French film policier
and American film noir, which, in true Melvillesque style, contrasts
the morality of criminals and law-enforcers.
|
Georges
Lautner (1962) |
|
Georges Lautner (1963) |
|
Georges
Lautner's best film, this has the feel of a great Hitchcock suspense thriller
in places. The film stars Bernard Blier in his finest role and makes
a scathing assault on the French legal system.
|
|
|
The
best of Georges Lautner's comic parodies of the French crime thriller unites
Lino Ventura and Bernard Blier as you have never seen them before.
Michel Audiard's witty dialogue is a bonus.
|
Julien
Duvivier (1963) |
|
Jean-Luc Godard (1964) |
|
Possibly
the best example of French film noir in the 1960s, this chilling
adaptation of a James Hadley Chase novel is guaranteed to bring on the
goose pimples.
|
|
|
Jean-Luc
Godard clearly had tongue firmly in cheek when he made this homage to the
low budget American thriller. Brilliantly subversive, daringly funny,
it is one of Godard's more accessible works.
|
Jean-Luc Godard (1965) |
|
Jean-Luc Godard (1965) |
|
|
Lemmy
Caution is resurrected for this bizarre blend of crime thriller and science-fiction,
intended as a satire on contemporary French politics. Outrageously
funny, yet deeply disturbing.
|
|
|
Godard's
most celebrated film is this bizarre yet striking deconstruction of American
pulp fiction. It marks the start of Godard's radical departure from
the conventional narrative form in his continual quest to re-invent cinema.
|
Costa-Gavras (1965) |
|
Jean-Pierre Melville (1966) |
 |
Costa-Gavras'
first film is this magnificently constructed crime thriller, the director's
tribute to American film noir. The film stars Yves Montand,
who would work with Costa-Gavras on several subsequent films.
|
|
 |
This
is arguably the best of Jean-Pierre Melville's distinctive crime thrillers,
both mesmerising and shocking its audience with its hard-edged neo-realist
depiction of gangland violence.
|
Jean-Pierre Melville (1967) |
|
Jacques Deray (1969) |
 |
With
its ice-cold existentialist cinematography and a chilling performance from
Alain Delon, this stylish cult film is the closest that the gangster thriller
got to being represented as a work of art.
|
|
|
Alain
Delon and Romy Schneider star in this suspenseful psychological drama,
which has strong undercurrents of Freudian lust and perversion.
|
Costa-Gavras (1969) |
|
Claude Chabrol (1969) |
|
This
landmark political thriller which won two Oscars was partly inspired by
real-life events in Greece. Beneath the obvious caricatures and the
black comedy there is a chilling sub-text.
|
|
|
A
sleepy provencial village harbours a serial killer and the school mistress
suspects the local butcher. One of the best psychological thrillers
made in France, filled with suspense, with a chilling macabre under-belly.
|
Jean-Pierre
Melville (1970) |
|
Philippe de Broca (1973) |
|
This
stylish mix of film noir and western became one of the definitive policiers
of the 1970s, crafted by perhaps the only French film director to truly
master the genre.
|
|
|
Beginning
as what looks like the most outrageous spoof of the spy/thriller genre
ever,
this film develops into a poignant, but hugely entertaining, portrait of
a failing writer, played by the ever charming Jean-Paul Belmondo.
|
Yves Robert (1972) |
|
Jacques Deray (1975) |
|
Pierre Richard is hilarious in this notorious spoof thriller,
scripted by Francis Veber and featuring the great Bernard Blier.
|
|
|
Alain Delon and Jean-Louis Trintignant play a dangerous game
of cat and mouse in this masterfully composed thriller
which has a striking edge of realism.
|
Henri
Verneuil (1975) |
|
Yves Boisset (1977) |
|
One
of the best examples of the kind of high budget, action- packed crime-thriller
which proved to be so popular in France in the mid- 1970s. The film
includes some of Jean-Paul Belmondo's most daring stunts.
|
|
|
Patrick
Dewaere gives an impressive performance in this hard-edged crime thriller,
one of the earliest "neo-polars", in which the State is shown to be a bigger
villain than any individual group of criminals.
|
Georges Lautner (1977) |
|
Alain Corneau (1977) |
|
This fine example of the neo-polar features Alain Delon
at his near-best in a well-scripted, fast-paced and very stylish thriller.
|
|
|
Yves Montand and Marie Dubois are a winning combination in this suspenseful,
film noir thriller, one of Alain Corneau's most compelling films.
|
Michel
Deville (1978) |
|
Jean-Jacques Beineix (1981) |
|
A
disturbing political thriller which uses an unconventional narrative form
to emphasise the film’s central premise: the extent to which technology
dehumanises society, reducing individuals to nameless commodities.
|
|
|
With
its sylish photography, awesome sets and adrenaline-pumping action scenes,
Diva
was the most highly rated French thriller of the 1980s, showing impressionist
and existentialist influences.
|
Claude
Miller (1981) |
|
Bertrand
Tavernier (1981) |
|
A
brilliantly taut psychological, minimalist thriller, which features a remarkable
confrontation between two stalwarts of French cinema, Lino Ventura and
Michel Serrault.
|
|
|
A
disturbing black comedy set in a French African colonial town. The
superb Philippe Noiret plays a police chief who, after years of humiliation,
decides to clean up crime - by shooting people.
|
Bob Swaim (1982) |
|
Robert Bresson (1983) |
|
Strong
acting performances and well choreographed action scenes makes this one
of the best and most realistic French crime thrillers of the 1980s.
|
|
|
Bresson's
final film, based on a short story by Tolstoy, is a minimalist masterpiece
which illustrates the corrupting power of money on the human soul.
|
Claude Miller (1983) |
|
Jean Becker (1983) |
|
A
near-perfect example of the French psychological thriller, made all the
more gripping by forceful performances from its lead actors Michel Serrault
and Isabelle Adjani.
|
|
|
In
this suspense-laden psychological thriller, Isabelle Adjani gives a mesmerising
performance as a deranged adolescent who might just be capable of murder.
Alain Souchon is her co-star.
|
Claude Zidi (1984) |
|
François
Truffaut (1984) |
|
If
you can't beat 'em, join 'em. That's the moral of this comedy thriller
which satirises corruption in the police force with a vengeance.
The film stars Philippe Noiret and Thierry Lhermitte.
|
|
|
Fanny
Ardant dazzles in this off-the-wall comedy thriller from one of France's
greatest directors. For his final film, Truffaut manages to unite
his passion for film noir, Hitchcockian suspense and comedy romance.
|
Patrice Leconte (1989) |
|
Jacques Audiard (1994) |
|
By
merging psychological thriller and comedy romance, Patrice Leconte creates
one of his best films, a dark yet tender study in loneliness and desire.
|
|
|
Typical
of the post-noir breed of thriller to emerge in the 1990s, this
film offers a dark study in obsession and survival. The film features
chilling performances from Jean-Louis Trintignant, Jean Yanne and Mathieu
Kassovitz.
|
Claude Chabrol (1995) |
|
Dominik Moll (2000) |
|
A
masterful film adaptation of a Ruth Rendell novel with a truly terrifying
climax. Isabelle Huppert and Sandrine Bonnaire star in one of Claude
Chabrol's best thrillers.
|
|
|
This superlative black comedy, winner of four Césars in 2001, consists
of an extraordinary sequence of comic situations. Sergi López is
both enchanting and disturbing as the friend who just can't help doing
a good turn.
|
Michael Haneke (2005) |
|
Jacques Audiard (2005) |
|
Hidden guilt has the power to destroy... Juliette Binoche and Daniel
Auteuil star in this taut psychological thriller with a shock ending.
|
|
|
This stylish noir thriller is set alight by a remarkable performance
from Romain Duris. The film won no less than 8 Cesars and is worth every one of them.
|
Buy DVDs of French thrillers...
|