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'Classe Tous Risques'
To come across "Classe Tous Risques"
is like discovering a bottle of marvelous French
wine you didn't remember you had, opening
it and finding it every bit as delicious as
its reputation promised. That's how good this
classic fatalistic French gangster film is.
Directed by the masterful Claude Sautet,
"Risques" had the misfortune
of being released in France in 1960, when its
traditional virtues were overshadowed by the
exploding New Wave. A dubbed version, titled
"The Big Risk," appeared briefly
in this country, but this Rialto Pictures release
is the first time the film has been shown in
the U.S. in a subtitled print.
"Risques" has long
been a favorite of Sautet's fellow directors.
Jean-Pierre Melville championed it, John Woo
said it was "powerful and timeless"
and critic-turned-director Bertrand Tavernier
flatly called it "one of the best French
gangster films, tense and warm, elliptical
and human." No one fortunate enough to
catch up to "Risques" during
its week at the Nuart in West Los Angeles will
feel like arguing the point.
"Risques," costarring the
stoic Lino Ventura as a former gangland
chief on the run and a lithe, charismatic Jean-Paul
Belmondo as the younger criminal who comes
to his aid, is a propulsive, adrenaline-fueled
film that gets its tension and energy from
the desperate state its protagonist finds himself
in.
Abel Davos (Ventura), sentenced to death
in absentia when he fled France, has been
hiding in Italy for nearly a decade. Now, with
his wife and two small sons, he is determined
to return home. His family will come back by
train, but Davos and his partner need much
more elaborate plans to cross the border.
Naturally, things do not go as planned,
and Davos' situation becomes increasingly desperate.
He contacts his ex-partners in the Paris underworld
and, after some soul-searching, they find a
young man, Eric Stark (Belmondo, who filmed
this back-to-back with "Breathless"),
willing to go to his aid.
As with all the classic French gangster films,
"Risques" explores the criminal
code, focusing on the importance of loyalty
and honor among thieves and showing us exactly
what it is stand-up guys stand up for.
The high-tension situations Davos and Stark
go through are too numerous — and
too unexpected — to detail, with the
exception of noting that with someone as handsome
as Stark involved, female attachments (Sandro
Milo's Liliane) are soon part of the equation.
Ghislain Cloquet's beautiful black-and-white
cinematography looks as good in "Risques"
new 35-millimeter print as the day it was
released. In addition to its crisp action sequences,
the film has an excellent sense of place, showing
us Paris, Nice and the small villages and French
countryside between.
Filmgoers who know Sautet's name at
all may be surprised to find it attached to
this kind of film. Though the director started
out as an assistant director for such legendary
French filmmakers as Jacques Becker and Georges
Franju, he's best known for the humanistic
character studies such as "Cesar and
Rosalie" and "A Heart in Winter"
that he made much later in his career.
Yet one of the things that makes "Classe
Tous Risques" distinctive are the
palpable emotional connections it makes with
its characters.
Though he is the hardest of hard cases, Davos
cares deeply about his family, and the feelings
of regret, sadness and desperation that cross
his face are just one of the factors that make
this film the classic it is.
'Classe Tous Risques'
MPAA rating: Unrated
A Rialto Pictures
release. Director Claude Sautet. Producer Jean
Darvey. Executive producers Robert Amon. Screenplay
by Claude Sautet, José Giovanni, Pascal
Jardin. Cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet. Editor
Albert Jurgenson. Music Georges Delerue. In
French with English subtitles. Running time:
1 hour, 40 minutes.
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