Summary
Inspecteur Maigret investigates a series of murders
involving young women. All of the murders were committed in the vicinity
of a Parisian butcher’s shop in the middle of the night whilst the victims
were walking home. To catch the killer, Maigret decides to
set a trap, by enacting a reconstruction of the latest murder.
Review
Jean Gabin stars in one of his most famous roles, that
of Inspector Maigret, in this atmospheric 1950s policier directed by one
of France's most talented directors, Jean Delannoy.
Of
all the screen actors to have played Maigret, Gabin is by far the best,
and in this film (the first of his three film appearances in the role)
he brilliantly portrays the ruthless cunning and world weariness of Georges
Simenon's famous fictional detective.
The
film typifies the kind of crime thriller that was popular in France in
the 1950s, with its shadowy sets and exotic characters, very evocative
of the American film noir of the 1940s. Paul Misraki's haunting
Maigret
theme
seems to hang in the air like a venomous fog, drawing the audience inescapably
into a dark and dangerous twilight world. Some parts of the film
are quite disturbing, particularly the murder attempts, some scenes having
a chilling resonance with Hitchcock's Psycho. However, it
has to be said that the film is much closer to the conventional policier
of its time than to the psychological thriller it could have been.
There
are three things which make this a particularly memorable film. First,
there is the atmosphere, which is relentlessly dark and heavy, conveying
the sense that there is something menacing lurking just out of camera shot.
Secondly, the plot is unusually sophisticated for a film of this genre,
with some very pleasing twists and turns and, best of all, a totally implausible
murderer. Finally, the acting is of a very high calibre, not
just Jean Gabin. Rising star Annie Girardot is captivating as the
elusive and mysterious Madame Maurin, whilst Jean Desailly, a stalwart
of French cinema in the 1940s and 1950s, gives one of his best screen performances.
Delannoy
could perhaps have been a little more daring and pushed the suspense thriller
dimension rather than adhering so rigidly to the conventions of the policier
genre. Nevertheless, in spite of this, Maigret tend un piège
is
a classic of its type, and one which has aged well. It is of course
an absolute must for fans of Simenon's celebrated detective.
© James Travers 2000
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