Films francais
    We have moved to: www.filmsdefrance.com     
 
Police Python 357
1976 Crime / Thriller
 
Credits
  • Director: Alain Corneau
  • Script: Daniel Boulanger, Alain Corneau
  • Photo: Etienne Becker
  • Music: Georges Delerue
  • Cast: Yves Montand (Inspecteur Marc Ferrot), François Périer (Commissaire Ganay), Simone Signoret (Thérèse Ganay), Stefania Sandrelli (Sylvia Leopardi), Mathieu Carrière (L'inspecteur Ménard), Vadim Glowna (L'inspecteur Abadie), Claude Bertrand (Le marchand de cochons), Gabrielle Doulcet (La vieille aux chats), Alice Reichen (La marchande de stylos), Tony Rödel (L'Alsacien)
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Runtime: 125 min
  • Aka: The Case Against Ferro
 
 
 
Summary
Marc Ferrot is a police inspector in the town of Orléans, his love of women equalled only by his love of firearms.  One night, he meets Sylvia, an attractive young woman who has just escaped from prison.  Ferrot takes Sylvia as his lover, not realising that she is also having an affair with his immediate superior, Commissaire Ganay.  When he hears of this, Ganay kills Sylvia in a moment of passion.  Following the advice of his paralysed wife, Ganay decides to cover his tracks.  As Ferrot investigates Sylvia’s murder he is surprised to find that all of the clues point to him being the murderer…

Review
After his original debut feature, France société anonyme, director Alain Corneau won further acclaim for this very respectable offering in the film noir / policier genre.  Corneau chose to set the film in Orléans, the town in which he grew up as a child, and one which provides an appropriate backdrop for a tale of subterfuge and bloody double dealings.  Well scripted, well acted and well paced, Police Python 357 is the first of a series of quality crime-thrillers which Corneau directed in the 1970s and early 1980s which were both well-received by the critics and very popular with the cinema-going public.

The film features Yves Montand in one of his most compelling and hard-edged performances, a stark contrast with his other popular persona, that of the sophisticated and very amiable singer.  He appears in the film with his real-life wife, Simone Signoret, in an acutely poignant sequence.   The film gets its title from the Colt Python 357, a powerful firearm that was standard issue to the American police.

© James Travers 2004

 

Buy this film: