☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Classe
Tous Risques (1960) – C. Sautet
It’s like the long drawn-out moody denouement
from another film in which Lino Ventura has lived a successful life of crime
but which culminated in his escaping from France to live in exile. However, there
was no other film! Classe Tous Risques begins abruptly with Ventura seeking to
return to Paris after a long exile with his wife and two young kids and a
partner. After stealing money for the
road and nearly getting caught, they run into tragedy when they are confronted
at the border by customs officials and a shoot-out leaves only Ventura and his
two boys (7 and 5) alive. So, he calls
up his old friends in Paris to come get him out of Nice and back home – but they
don’t want to know him anymore, now that they are all set up in new profitable
lives. They send a hired hand instead,
who turns out to be Belmondo, who turns out to be a good egg. He helps Ventura to get the kids taken care
of and then they turn their minds to revenge.
But Ventura is running out of steam, feeling low, more empty than stoic;
Belmondo is full of vigor, falling in love with Sandra Milo, as a
counterpoint. The film follows the usual
course of French noir, carefully observing the mechanics of each moment,
whether it be a heist or a conference amongst gangsters. There’s action enough but the mood is sombre. Melville owned this genre but his great films
(except Bob le Flambeur, 1956) all came later.
Perhaps Touchez Pas Au Grisbi (1954) and Rififi (1955) are the best
earlier examples. Still, this hit the
spot.
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