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Le Passager de la pluie
1969 Crime / Thriller
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Credits
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Director: René Clément
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Script: Sébastien Japrisot, Lorenzo Ventavoli
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Photo: Andréas Winding
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Music: Francis Lai
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Cast: Marlène Jobert (Mélancolie
'Mellie' Mau),
Charles Bronson (Col. Harry Dobbs),
Annie Cordy (Juliette),
Jill Ireland (Nicole),
Ellen Bahl (Madeleine Legauff),
Viviane Chantel,
Steve Eckhardt (U.S. officer),
Jean-Daniel Ehrmann,
Jean Gaven (Inspector Toussaint),
Marika Green (Hostess at Tania's),
Corinne Marchand (Tania),
Marc Mazza (The Passenger (Mac Guffin)),
Marcel Pérès (Station Master),
Jean Piat (M. Armand),
Gabriele Tinti (Tony Mau)
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Country: France
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Language: French
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Runtime: 120 min
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Aka: Rider on the Rain
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Summary
Whilst her husband, an airline navigator, is away from home, Mellie is stalked by strange
man. After the man has broken into her home and raped her, Mellie shoots him dead
and dumps his body in the sea. A short while later, the traumatised young woman
realises she is being trailed by another man, Colonel Dobbs. Unsure whether Dobbs
is a dangerous crook or an honest policeman, Mellie finds herself drawn into a bizarre
game of cat and mouse…
Review
After the commercial failure of his big budget war-time drama
Paris brûle-t-il? (1966), director
René Clément returned to somewhat safer ground for his next film, the ever-popular
psychological thriller. His previous forays into this genre –
Plein soleil (1960) and Les
Félins (1964) – were big successes and showed a genuine talent for suspense
and intrigue. Although Le Passager de la pluie
isn’t quite in the same league as these two films, it is a compelling and
distinctive work, an obvious homage to Hitchcock, but also subtly different to conventional
thrillers.
The strength of this particular thriller lies mainly in the performances of its two
lead actors, Marlène Jobert and Charles Bronson. Jobert is particularly good
at playing mixed up, terrified but gutsy young women, and the anxiety she portrays on
screen is easily transferred to the spectator. The American actor Charles Bronson
needs no introduction but here he appears to be playing across, if not sending up, his
confident hard guy image. Playing a character that is neither obviously good nor
bad, Bronson carries the unsettling ambiguity in his part very well. The rapport
between the two actors is both jarring and magical, like a married couple who derive some
kind of sado-masochistic pleasure in living together, even though they are clearly ill-suited
for one another.
As well as being a thriller, the film is also a strange kind
of love story. Even when he is taunting Mellie to distraction, Colonel Dobbs is
clearly drawn to her, and she for her part is easily seduced by his charms and brutal
attentions. The fact that Dobbs' real intentions are not revealed until near the
end of the film adds a dark psychological dimension to what is very nearly a familiar
French romantic drama.
Connecting the present drama to a past crisis in Mellie’s
life is a nice touch, adding a layer of sophistication which works well in explaining
why the characters behave as they do. Unfortunately, this is somewhat undermined
by some bizarre comic elements in the latter part of the film, which propels the narrative
dangerously close to self-parody. Overall, however, the film hangs together very
well. There's a touch of genius in the final shot - so poignant, yet so irresistibly
funny.
© James Travers 2005
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