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La Môme vert-de-gris
1953 Crime / Drama / Thriller
Credits
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Director: Bernard Borderie
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Script: Jacques Berland, Bernard Borderie, based on a novel by Peter Cheyney
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Photo: Jacques Lemare
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Music: Guy Lafarge
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Cast: Eddie Constantine (Lemmy Caution), Dominique Wilms (Carlotta de la Rue),
Howard Vernon (Rudy Saltierra), Darío Moreno (Joe Madrigal),
Jean-Marie Robain (Willie), Maurice Ronet (Mickey),
Nicolas Vogel (Kerts), Jess Hahn (Le marin),
Philippe Hersent (Le commissaire), Gaston Modot,
Roger Hanin, Georges Wilson
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Runtime: 97 min; B&W
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Aka: Poison Ivy; The Gun Moll
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Summary
FBI agent Lemmy Caution is
despatched to Casablanca to prevent a consignment of gold from being hi-jacked
by a ruthless gang of hoodlums. A beautiful cabaret singer, Carlotta,
a.k.a. La Môme vert-de-gris, lures Caution into a web of mayhem
and betrayal. Could this be Lemmy Caution’s last adventure
Review
The previously unknown Eddie
Constantine became an overnight star in France when La Môme vert-de-gris
was released in 1953, one of the most popular films of that year. The
French cinemagoer’s appetite for all things American, in particular noirish
gangster films, was rewarded by this tongue-in-cheek pastiche of the B-movie
genre, custom-made for a French audience.
In his first significant film role, Eddy Constantine fits the part of the
suave action hero Lemuel Caution ("Lemmy pour les dames") like a glove.
The film was so popular that it spawned an entire series of similar thrillers
over the following decade, culminating in Jean-Luc Godard’s incomprehensible
sci-fi film noir fantasy Alphaville
(1965).
Excluding the Godard film, La Môme vert-de-gris is probably
the best film in the Lemmy Caution series – it is much closer to the B-movie
form which inspired it and is less obviously a parody than some of the later
films. Although the film is slowed by some weak plotting and an excess
of superfluous dialogue, it is actually rather good in places. The
location work is impressive for a film of this period and the action sequences
do work to create a sense of dramatic tension. Unlike most of the later
Lemmy Caution films, there are times in this film where you really do doubt
whether our insouciant hero will survive to the next scene. All in all,
a very respectable pastiche of a familiar and much-loved genre.
© James Travers 2004
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