(1954) Even gangsters brush their teeth... Jean Gabin’s “Max
Le Menteur” and René Dary’s Riton, over-the-hill gangland
buddies, have just pulled the heist of a lifetime: 50 million francs in
gold bars — enough grisbi (French underworld argot for “loot”)
to give them both a cushy retirement. But when Dary’s two-timing
moll Jeanne Moreau spills the beans to drug-dealing bad guy Lino Ventura,
a bloody gang war ensues, climaxed by a motorized duel with guns and grenades
on a deserted country road. The granddaddy of the modern Gallic gangster
movie, Touchez Pas Au Grisbi (translation: “Don‘t touch
the loot!”) immediately created a market for offspring like Dassin’s Rififi and Melville’s Bob Le Flambeur. Adapted from
the seminal 1952 Série Noire novel by Albert Simonin, Grisbi took the gangster saga to new heights of realism by portraying the criminal
class as a larcenous subbourgeoisie and introducing authentic underworld
slang to screen dialogue. More than a suspense drama set in post-war Paris, Grisbi is a poignant look at friendship, honor and betrayal among
thieves. Despite its coolly-staged action scenes, Becker (Casque d’Or,
Le Trou, etc.) puts the accent more on characterization and mood,
one of its most fondly remembered sequences played out not with guns,
but with white wine and foie gras, as Gabin and Dary enjoy a midnight
snack (“the best eating scene ever” – Rififi director Dassin) and talk about dames, retirement and old age before heading
to the bathroom to don their pj’s, examine their jowls in the mirror,
and, oui, brush their teeth. Seventeen years after Pépé
Le Moko, Grisbi brought Jean Gabin out of a near-fatal career slump,
winning him the Best Actor prize at Venice and marking his decisive change
from pre-war Pépé to postwar père, and launched
the careers of two future stars: former wrestler Ventura (discovered by
Gabin at a match) and screen vamp Jeanne Moreau (years before Malle’s The Lovers and Truffaut’s Jules and Jim). And, with
Jean Wiener’s harmonica theme, Grisbi immortalized one of
the most haunting of movie melodies, crossing the Atlantic even before
the movie did. New subtitles by Lenny Borger, who recently tackled the
tough argot of Rififi and Bob Le Flambeur, capture the flavor
and irony of Simonin’s crackling dialogue. “Shows what other
gangster movies often ignore: that the reason for earning money dishonestly
is to live in high style.” – Time Out (London).
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“A wonderful treasure... a major work by the
underappreciated Jacques Becker... Unbeatable as a gripping story of loyalty,
betrayal and the price of friendship in the Parisian underworld, “Grisbi”
not only marks the end of one cinematic era and the beginning of another,
it also features memorable performances by two of France’s movie
icons, Jean Gabin and Jeanne Moreau.”
– Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times (Click
here to read entire review)
“In Touchez pas au Grisbi, real men eat paté. Consistently
surprising.... as
classic and as lived-in as Gabin’s impeccable double-breasted suits.
The
movie is, in every sense, a celebration of savoir-faire. I don’t
know of (a
gangster movie) with a more complex or a more delicate bouquet.”
– Terrence Rafferty, New York Times (Click
here to read the entire article)
“Set the standard for the French underworld crime
capers to follow.... The
action is just as vicious as it has to be, and Becker pulls off one
tough-guy surprise after another with masterly soft-shoe storytelling.
Best
of all, Gabin’s performance is more than a star turn. He reveals
how hard it
is for a gangster to keep up a ‘class act.’”
– Michael Sragow, The New Yorker. (Click
here to read the entire review)
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