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As beautifully fatalistic
as its title, the classic thriller "Elevator
to the Gallows" is a consummate
entertainment rich with the romantic atmosphere
of Paris in the 1950s. Coming at a turning
point in French cinematic history, it drew
upon several major talents — director
Louis Malle, star Jeanne Moreau, cinematographer
Henri Decaë, musician Miles Davis —
and achieved near-legendary results with all
of them.
Made in 1957, when first-time director Malle
was only 24 years old, "Elevator"
("Ascenseur pour l'Echafaud")
has the brisk craftsmanship and efficiency
of classic French cinema and a breathless hint
of the energy of the New Wave that was but
a few years away.
It made a major film star of Moreau, whose
work remains completely bewitching. It
called forth from Davis an improvised jazz
score that, anchored by his piercing work on
the trumpet, has become iconic in its own right.
And in a pristine restoration by Rialto Pictures,
the gold standard of reissue distributors,
it showcases Decaë's luminous, adventurous
cinematography. It's not something you want
to miss.
Adapted by Malle and Roger Nimier from a
pulp novel by Noël Calef, "Elevator"
has one of those twisty plots that, as typified
by films like Clouzot's "Les Diabolique"
and the Boileau-Narcejac novel that was
the basis of Hitchcock's "Vertigo,"
was very much of a French taste.
It starts with what has the look of a perfect
crime. Cool customer Julien Tavernier (Maurice
Ronet, later the star of Malle's "The
Fire Within"), a case-hardened former
paratrooper, is planning a murder. The victim
is to be his boss, who also happens to be the
wealthy husband of his mistress Florence, played
by Moreau.
Things do not, needless to say, go exactly
as planned, and "Elevator"
ends up following the separate destinies
of Julien, Florence and a pair of delinquent
teenage lovers (who prefigure the Jean-Paul
Belmondo-Jean Seberg couple of 1959's "Breathless")
who go for an impulsive joyride in Julien's
convertible.
From "Elevator's" opening
shot, a super-tight close-up of Moreau,
the great skill of cinematographer Decaë,
who also shot the debut films of Truffaut and
Chabrol, is very much in evidence. Decaë
was a master at working with available light,
a technique considered daring at the time.
It is especially effective in the film's signature
sequence, shot with the camera in a baby carriage,
of Moreau's Florence searching for Julien on
the streets of Paris.
"She was lit only by the windows of
the Champs-Elysees, that had never been
done," the director recalled in "Malle
on Malle." "That first week there
was a rebellion of the technicians at the lab
after they had seen the dailies. They went
to the producer and said, 'You must not let
Malle and Decaë destroy Jeanne Moreau.'
They were horrified."
Rather than destroy Moreau, who was already
the top stage actress of her generation,
"Elevator" was the
platform for her further ascent. The desperate
urgency and ethereal despair of Florence's
quest for Julien, which one critic has likened
to Eurydice in the Underworld, remains completely
compelling and underscores the actress' unsurpassed
ability to subtly convey complex emotions on
screen.
Orchestrating all of this was, of course,
Malle. He had previously worked as an assistant
to two very different directors, Robert Bresson
on "A Man Escaped" and Jacques Cousteau
on "The Silent World," which
led him to crack that he was uncertain about
working with actors because "I'd been
filming fish for four years."
Uncertain or not, Malle did such powerful
work here he won the prestigious Prix Louis
Delluc for best French film of the year
and went on to direct such diverse efforts
as "Murmur of the Heart,"
"Atlantic City" and "Au
Revoir Les Enfants."
"Elevator to the Gallows,"
this welcome restoration emphasizes,
can hold its own with any of them.
'Elevator to
the Gallows'
MPAA rating: Unrated
A Rialto Pictures release. Director Louis Malle.
Producer Jean Thuillier. Screenplay Louis Malle,
Roger Nimier, based on the novel by Noël
Calef. Cinematography Henri Decaë. Editor
Léonide Azar. Music Miles Davis. In
French with English subtitles. Running time:
1 hour, 31 minutes. Exclusively at Laemmle's
Royal, 11523 Santa Monica Blvd., West Los Angeles,
(310) 477-5581, and Laemmle's Playhouse 7,
673 E. Colorado Blvd.,Pasadena, (626) 844-6500.
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