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Posted: 08/16/03 |
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Jean-Pierre Melville, Le Cercle rouge (France/ Italy, Jean-Pierre Melville, 1974) This determinedly non-flashy noir has influenced all over the place - Miller's Crossing, Quentin Tarantino and John Woo owe much to Melville's 'perfect heist movie.' The master of the monosyllabic crime film presents a complex and layered account of a jewel robbery. The film is consciously leaden, shot in real time for the most part. Melville's central themes are alienation, masculinity, mundanity with flashes of downbeat violence. He is interested Alain Delon, recently released from prison, flees Marseille where he is no longer welcome, serendipitously hooks up with Gian-Maria Volonté's escaped career criminal and together they plan a raid on an elaborate Parisian jewellery store. The originator of the plot is a prison guard's brother who has been a model employee for some 17 years. This idea of trying to escape such a mundane life is often the mainspring for noir or gangster films from Double Indemnity onwards, but Melville very much presents the lives of the Various motifs and 'red circle' metaphors - from the opening stop light to the chalk on a billiard cue - are deployed as red herrings, blinds to throw the viewer a dummy. Similarly Melville's script is full of moments at which you try to second guess him, or link things which you have very explicitly been told could not and have not been linked. Melville toys with audience expectations of spectacle and fantastical crime narrative, and it is only at the end when Delon and his gang lie dying that the viewer traces back their reading to 'make sense' of the film and understand that they were being played all along simply by assuming that they were going to be played. There are no double-crosses or spectacular coincidences, just some guys with guns stealing jewellery. This is the essence of the film, and the reason that the misé-en-scene is so achingly realistic and bleak. The cold mud that Delon and Volonté sink into at their first, circumstantial, meeting (and that they finally die in) is a figure for the film as a whole - soggy, real, dragging one down, messy. There is no existential moment of understanding or enlightenment here. Again, this is the reason for the film playing in real time. The agonising tension is built simply through the agonisingly slow process of planning and executing a heist. Melville gives his scenes a pleasing heft - they feel real, right, substantial. Melville's occasional stylistic tricks - panning shots, fluid dollying, jump-cut focus - serve to highlight the lack of flash surrounding the plot of the gang. In many ways this is an anti-noir film. There are few conventions (and those that are in the film are, as I've argued, intentionally undermined.). The film has a stately pace, few visual motifs. The atmosphere is taut but hardly full of thick tension. Yet Melville is fascinated by American gangster movies, and the influences and intertexts are worn on the sleeve. The effect is the slightly unsettling thing called 'cool' (you're Jerome de Groot is still trying to give up smoking, and watching French noir doesn't help much... Got a problem? Email us at filmmonthly@hotmail.com |