Credits Director:
Henri Verneuil
Script:
Henri Verneuil, Jean Laborde and Francis Veber
Photo:
Jean Penzer
Music:
Ennio Morricone
Cast:
Jean-Paul
Belmondo (Le commissaire Jean Letellier), Charles
Denner (L'inspecteur Moissac), Adalberto Maria Merli (Pierre
Valdeck/Minos),
Rosy Varte (Germaine Doizon), Lea Massari (Nora Elmer)
Runtime:
125 min
Aka:
Fear
Over the City; The Night Caller
Summary After receiving a series of threatening
phone calls,
Nora Elmer falls to her death from a high-rised apartment. The
death
is investigated by police inspector Jean Letellier, who soon receives a
mysterious phone call from someone calling himself Minos and
who
claims to want to purge Paris of loose women. Realising that he
is
dealing with a dangerous maniac, Letellier embarks on a perilous hunt
for
the serial killer…
Review This high budget, fast moving action thriller
typifies
the kind of film that was hugely popular in France in the mid-
1970s.
Peur sur la ville epitomises the crime thriller or 'polar'
of that decade, in which tough cops pursue tough villains, with an
emphasis
on action stunts over plot and characterisation. The film starred
Jean-Paul Belmondo, then one of the most popular actors in the country,
and attracted a respectable four million cinema-goers in France.
Although
the film is unashamedly popularist, Peur sur la ville is not a
shallow
cops and robber film, of the kind which the polar genre degenerated
into
towards the end of the 1970s (parallelling the demise of the same genre
in American cinema). Henri Verneuil was one of the most
talented
and versatile directors of his generation, certainly in the action
thriller
genre. Few of Belmondo's subsequent thrillers have the
drive
and grim sense of menace that Peur sur la ville has, and it
also
features one of his most terrifying adversaries, a schizoid
psychopathic
played brilliantly by Adalberto Maria Merli.
Unusually
for a film of this genre, the characterisation is rather good, arising
from a combination of a fairly good script and above average acting
performances.
Add a touch of black comedy and some chilling music and you have what
many
regard as a classic.
What
most viewers remember from this film is the sheer daring in the action
stunts. Not only does the film boast some of the most impressive
car chase sequences to feature in a French film, but we also have a
heart-stopping
chase sequence on top of the Lafayette galleries and an extraordinary
helicopter
stunt filmed in the middle of Paris. Best of all, the film
includes
what is possibly Belmondo's most famous, and most impressive stunt
sequence
- a delirious chase atop a fast-moving metro train.
Widely
regarded as the best of Jean-Paul Belmondo's many crime thrillers, Peur
sur la ville is also a rare example of a popular film of the genre
which has genuine artistic merit as a work of cinema.
©
James Travers 2001
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