ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
3,8 k
MA NOTE
Franck Poupart est un vendeur de porte à porte névrosé dans un quartier sinistre de la banlieue parisienne. Il rencontre Mona, une adolescente prostituée par sa propre tante. Franck voudrait... Tout lireFranck Poupart est un vendeur de porte à porte névrosé dans un quartier sinistre de la banlieue parisienne. Il rencontre Mona, une adolescente prostituée par sa propre tante. Franck voudrait changer de vie et sauver Mona de sa tante.Franck Poupart est un vendeur de porte à porte névrosé dans un quartier sinistre de la banlieue parisienne. Il rencontre Mona, une adolescente prostituée par sa propre tante. Franck voudrait changer de vie et sauver Mona de sa tante.
- Prix
- 6 nominations au total
Avis en vedette
I seem to be on something of an Alain Corneau binge, somewhat by accident. (These films were all recently added to kanopy...) Corneau is certainly not a one-trick pony, as his work spans an incredible range. This creation offers the ultimate noir de noir: super dark, bleak, depressing, yet somehow compelling at the same time. Quite well constructed and reminiscent in some ways of both the Coen brothers and Lina Wertmuller... I would not, however, characterize this film as a comedy. A bit too dark for that...
Unique, that's the only way to describe this movie that is absolutely impossible to put in any category...it has a very very special atmosphere, which I have never seen before. Patrick Dewaere is purely awesome, outstanding, one of his best roles, unforgettable, for this adaptation of a Jim Thompson's novel that I have never read. The opening scene, with Dewaere doing calisthenics with a very old fashioned and bizarre music, this scene announces and summarizes the whole movie. Not a drama, not a crime movie, not a comedy, simply something unique. Alain Corneau makes here something that looks like a Bertrand Blier's film. Everything, characters and situations, is sordid here, everything. It's a nasty losers story, emphasized by the settings and music.
This is the second Jim Thompson adaptation I review here and it's purely coincidental. I really must love Thompson's style. I wasn't expected a masterpiece when I bought Série Noire in DVD, tho. I've always been fond of the late Patrick Dewaere, I think he is one of the best French actors ever, and I like Corneau's cinema, but Série Noire was unexpected and it is indeed extraordinary. It's daring, tense and plunged into harsh realism. It's the kind of film that stays with you once you've finished watching it. It shows how easy it is to lose control when society becomes a weight on personal identity. Série Noire is a different kind of Film Noir and probably the best French crime film among Le cercle rouge and Du Rififi chez les hommes. It has a ton of black humor and a bleak atmosphere. Corneau shoots Paris as if it was itself a character, a gloomy, grey and ruthless antagonist. The sordid locations and the moisty dirty apartments where the action takes place give a really weird and nightmarish mood to the film. The social pressure which the character is subject is huge and unbearable; it literally toys with him until he breaks. Patrick Dewaere shines like in no other films, he's brilliant as the neurotic looser who gets wrapped into this tragic vortex after the killing of an old woman. His downfall somehow reminded me of the dizzying Richard Widmark's runaway in Night and the city. Georges Perec's dialogues are just great, very similar to Michel Audiard or Bertrand Blier's style. The cast is perfect. Bernard Blier is excellent as usual and Marie Trintignant is mysterious and sensual. If you like 70's French crime films, you have to watch it, this is one of the best.
Probably the best film i never intend to watch again.
This film is absolutely stressing, every minute of it is stressing. Nothing good ever happens, i cringe at every decision the lead ever made and the overall atmosphere is that of absolute claustrophobia.
Everyone absolutely sucks in this film ( the character, not the actors), they are violent, selfish , mean spirited and cruel, with the exception of Mona which is portrayed as sort of a Venus at the same time as a saint. I thought her portrayal was a bit problematic since we get the idea that if you refuse to essentially take advantage out of someone , then this someone is immediately in debt with you. It also bothered me how the film makes you like her and root for her best and at the same time gives us a lead that sells her short in every chance he ever gets.
Anyways, the film was good it's just a little bit too depressing for me, i got to say though that i was happy that it had a sort of a happy ending, i mean things probably went pretty badly for the characters after the end but i'm just grateful that the film chose not to show that.
10sgendron
One of the most original film experiences of the 70s is certainly French. Série noire is distinctive in its narrative and the form is never overwhelming the content.
Although most of it seems improvised, it is always surprising to learn that all of it was written down to the last word by Perec.
The most fascinating aspect of this movie is the angle of "harsh realism" that Corneau chose to tell the story. No external music is polluting the grimy atmosphere depicted with true to life colors and textures. And yet, it is one of the most romantic movie - in the purest form of the genre - that one can wish for.
And how can anyone not be touched by the late Patrick Deweare acting. It has been said that this movie took such a toll on the actor that some are almost suggesting that it was the starting point of his depressive state. It is truly a very moving, strong performance, full of surprise and nuance, almost so strong that it is unbearable to watch.
For those who are searching for a new kind of film making and acting, Série noire is certainly one of the best movies to provide such an experience.
Although most of it seems improvised, it is always surprising to learn that all of it was written down to the last word by Perec.
The most fascinating aspect of this movie is the angle of "harsh realism" that Corneau chose to tell the story. No external music is polluting the grimy atmosphere depicted with true to life colors and textures. And yet, it is one of the most romantic movie - in the purest form of the genre - that one can wish for.
And how can anyone not be touched by the late Patrick Deweare acting. It has been said that this movie took such a toll on the actor that some are almost suggesting that it was the starting point of his depressive state. It is truly a very moving, strong performance, full of surprise and nuance, almost so strong that it is unbearable to watch.
For those who are searching for a new kind of film making and acting, Série noire is certainly one of the best movies to provide such an experience.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn this movie Marie Trintignant has her first nude scene at the age of sixteen and directed by Alain Corneau, who years later became her adoptive father (after he married Nadine Trintignant). In 'Projection privée', Corneau talked about the shooting of the nude scene: "I don't hide anything from her about the violence of the film and the hardness of the shooting, and I describe to her the scene where she opens her pink blouse, takes it off and gets completely naked in front of Patrick Dewaere. Marie will be marked by this film, especially by her nude scene in the bedroom. She will have trouble with nudity afterwards: is that where it comes from? Possibly, I don't deny this possible responsibility."
- ConnexionsFeatured in Un jour, un destin: Patrick Dewaere: Le dernier jour (2007)
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Détails
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 5 633 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 2 088 $ US
- 29 sept. 2019
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 5 633 $ US
- Durée1 heure 56 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1
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