Trou, Le (1960)

reviewed by
Dennis Schwartz


LE TROU (THE HOLE) (director: Jacques Becker; writer: Jacques Becker; cinematographer: Ghislain Cloquet; cast: Marc Michel (Claude Gaspard), Michel Constantin (Geo Cassid), Raymond Meunier (Monsignore), Jean Keraudy (Roland Darban), Philippe Leroy (Manu Borelli), André Bervil (Warden), Catherine Spaak (Nicole), Fr./It.-1960)

Set entirely in the Sante prison, in 1947, this based-on-fact, intriguingly detailed escape film rivals Bresson's A Man Escaped for intensity and character development. This thriller is so magnificently staged, building on the tension ordinarily found in such a confining place and magnifying it tenfold, as each prisoner must dig within himself for answers to why he is in prison and he must also dig inside the prison cell down to the sewer in order to escape.

Claude Gaspard (Marc Michel) is a clean-cut, handsome, well-mannered 27-year-old, accused by his slightly older, rich wife, of trying to murder her during an argument over money, as he tried to take the shotgun away from her and it accidently went off hitting her in the shoulder. He is charged with a pre-meditated manslaughter attempt, something that can get him 10- years in the slammer if convicted.

When he is transferred into a cellblock made up of hardened inmates because his cell is undergoing repairs, he is met with suspicion by his four new cellmates, who are planning on an escape and do not want an outsider to join them. All the sounds heard in the cell are the ones you would normally hear in a prison. There was no background music to take your mind off where you were, and by going through in precise real-time movements the daily prison grind, the constant personal searches and searches of the food parcels the men received, with the guard slicing up the rice puddings looking for files and such, the viewer gets the feeling what prison life is like for the men.

The men cunningly grill Claude, with Monsignore (Meunier) taking the I-can-be-your-friend approach, while Manu (Leroy) and Roland (Keraudy) do not readily open up to him, as they are still unsure if he will get a long enough sentence to chance the escape or if they can actually trust him. While Michel Constantin (Geo) questions him about his wife, getting from him that he was having an affair with his wife's 17-year-old sister, Nicole (Spaak), which is probably the real reason the argument took place.

There is something about Claude that makes him stick out as an outsider, someone you don't feel right about. Maybe its just that he comes off as too cunningly mannipulative in his contact with others to be thought of as a true friend.Yet, he fits in so well with his new cellmates by not calling attention to himself and acting grateful for their quiet acceptance of him, that it is easy to see how he could be accepted by the men.

That the warden seems to like him and after a few encounters with him over minor disciplinary matters, actually takes an interest in his case, makes the other prisoners take notice of him and become suspicious. But they decide to go on with their plans, thinking it is too late to turn back now. They have accepted Claude as one of them, as there was no reason not to, and feel that he has done his part so far in helping them dig a tunnel and has even shared with them the food parcels he has received.

On the night of the planned escape, he is called into the warden's office and told that his wife has dropped the charges against him. But he stays with the warden for 2 hours, allowing the men to realize that something is up, as no prisoner stays that long to chat with the warden; but it is too late, he has already betrayed them to gain for himself a reduced sentence.

This was Jacques Becker's last film; he died shortly after the film was released. What he has created in this thriller is a marvel in simplicity and understated relationships, showing how uncertain it could be to trust an outsider with your life.That the prisoners, in someway, understood Claude's flawed character and could accept his reason for betrayal, though he would never be safe in their company again, is readily seen on the hardened expressions they have as Claude is led away to another cell after his ill deed and one of them says, "poor little Claude," as the guards icily take him to another cell.

REVIEWED ON 7/14/99       GRADE: A

Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"

http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ


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