POLAR (director/writer/editor: Jacques Bral; screenwriter: from a book by Jean-Patrick Manchette "Morgue Pleine"/Jean-Paul Leca; cinematographers: Jacques Renoir/Jean-Paul Rosa Da Costa; editors: Anne Boissel/Noun Serra; cast: Jean-François Balmer (Eugene Tarpon), Sandra Montaigu (Charlotte Le Dantex), Pierre Santini (Inspecteur Coccioli), Roland Dubillard (Jean-Baptiste Haymann), Claude Chabrol (Theadore Lyssenko), Jean-Paul Bonnaire (Gerard Sergent), Marc Dudicourt (Le Loup), Gérard Loussine (César), Jean-Louis Foulquier (Alfonsino); Runtime: 97; Les Films Noris; 1984-France)
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
A dark, atmospheric film noir from France, that followed to the letter all the conventions of that genre. It was properly shot in B & W, which gave it that 1940s look. The protagonist is the classic noir private detective, with a name like a fish, Eugene Tarpon (Jean-François Balmer). The chubby Tarpon is not making any dough in his Paris walk-up detective agency and is getting so depressed he calls mom in the small village he comes from to tell her that he's coming back for good.
The film starts off with a voice-over by Tarpon explaining how miserable his week starts off and then goes into flashback to tell how really miserable his week turned out. His troubles multiply when an attractive woman named Charlotte Le Dantex (Montaigu) visits him late at night and he's been drinking to drown his sorrows, and she tells him that she wants to hire his services. She tells him that her roommate Louise is dead in the apartment and she doesn't want to go to the police because they will suspect her since they will know that she hated the victim. When Tarpon insists she call the police she leaves but, either because he's stupid or can't mind his business, he goes to her apartment. The police are already there and bring him in for questioning, as the police detective, Inspecteur Coccioli (Santini), detains him and reveals that he knows that Tarpon was an ex-cop who lost his job three years ago because he killed a farm protester. When he releases Tarpon, he has him followed.
A veteran journalist of some 35 years, Jean-Baptiste Haymann (Dubillard), sensing a mysterious story, takes him in his car to go for some drinks and tells him that he wants to work with him on the story. They lose the cop following them by some nifty driving by the journalist, as he outmaneuvers the more modern police car and causes him to turnover.
Out on the street near his place, Tarpon is accosted by a slimy character called César and forced to go see two foreign characters. They question him on the whereabouts of Charlotte and take him for a drive in the country where the one who hired them, Gerard Sergent (Bonnaire), also asks him about Charlotte. When he tells them he knows nothing, they leave him stranded on the country road. He finds out that Sergent loved Louise, and that he wants to get her killer.
As Tarpon takes stock of the situation since meeting Charlotte, he notes that he's been kidnapped, beaten, and shot at. When he meets Charlotte again, she tells him that Louise and her had met in Paris when they were both attractive 16-year-old runaways and both attracted men whom they used to gain favors from. But, she says, Louise became a tramp, corrupted by her lifestyle and corrupted everyone around her. She worked as a porno star under filmmaker Theadore Lyssenko (Chabrol-the famous director). When Tarpon visits Lyssenko on the set of his movie studio, he finds a frightened man who has been threatened. There's also another mysterious person, Le Loup (Dudicourt), who is looking for Charlotte.
When another pursuer of Charlotte turns up dead, Alfonsino, and Tarpon calls in Inspecteur Coccioli, he's told that Charlotte turned herself over to the police for protection and that she's not a suspect anymore. This strikes Tarpon as strange, since he just spent a night with her in a hotel and she confessed to killing Louise.
When Tarpon is confronted by Sergent again, he's asked to work for him and find the treasured object that is missing for which he says he would kill for. There are a few more surprise plot twists in a story that winds down in a muddled fashion, as the characters and the story are not clearly defined. The film was too much in awe of what film noir is supposed to be like to have much of a breath of its own, but this B-film was entertaining and the two main characters Balmer and Montaigu had a lot of spunk. This limited film is a good example of an escape film that delivers some mild thrills, but can't overcome becoming a cliché of the movie it was parodying.
REVIEWED ON 7/28/2001 GRADE: C
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net
© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ
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