Le combat dans l'île
- 1962
- Tous publics
- 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
981
YOUR RATING
After an unsuccessful assassination, a terrorist and his wife hide on a remote island in the house of a friend who doesn't suspect anything.After an unsuccessful assassination, a terrorist and his wife hide on a remote island in the house of a friend who doesn't suspect anything.After an unsuccessful assassination, a terrorist and his wife hide on a remote island in the house of a friend who doesn't suspect anything.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Diane Lepvrier
- Cécile
- (as Diana Lepvrier)
Jean-Pierre Melville
- Un membre de l'organisation
- (uncredited)
Clara Tambour
- Marthe
- (uncredited)
Jean Topart
- Récitant
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Behind the political message, a film defined by cinematography and admirable acting of Henri Serre, Romy Schneider and Jean Louis Trintignian. And, sure, the mark of Louis Malle.
A film about nuances of love and great portrait of a woman self definition. A film about nuances of revenge, to, about friendship and about justice.
Romy Scheider just shining under camera eye and the fight scenes on the isle are just impressive detail by detail.
The basic gift - the feeling after its end , than it represents a large mirror.
A film about nuances of love and great portrait of a woman self definition. A film about nuances of revenge, to, about friendship and about justice.
Romy Scheider just shining under camera eye and the fight scenes on the isle are just impressive detail by detail.
The basic gift - the feeling after its end , than it represents a large mirror.
In a France frightened by the rise of the far right a couple of weeks ago ,"le combat dans l'ile" seen today has a contemporary feel.The hero,Clément,played with talent by a deadpan Jean-Louis Trintignant,is a rich young man,who severs all links with his family ,except his wife Anne (Romy Schneider)and becomes part of an extremist group,which recalls the O.A.S..Their short-sighted philosophy considers that Occident is in jeopardy because of the socialists and the commies and they multiply the assassination attempts.Betrayed by his instructor,Serge takes refuge in his old friend Paul's house (Henri Serre),a socialist and a pacifist.
Shot in black and white ,with beautiful forest landscapes,this is an overlooked movie.Overshadowed by the new wave movies that were released by the dozen at the time,it could not appeal to the "conventional" audience either.Its slow pace,its rather risqué subject may have repelled most of the people.But it's about time to restore it to public favor.The story may be a fight between two men for a woman;but it is also the clash between two ideologies.
It proves that Romy Schneider was a great actress well before her heyday in the seventies:here,she definitively relinquishes her former insipid roles,the likes of Sissi to a modern woman.Henri Serre,who was Jim in Truffaut's "jules and Jim" gives a heartfelt and sensitive performance.Too bad he fell into oblivion soon after it.
Alain Cavalier started strongly with "le combat dans l'île" ,continued in the same vein with "l'insoumis" (1964)(starring Alain Delon and Léa Massari),but was disappointing afterward.Only "un étrange voyage" (1980) and "le plein de super"(1975)
are interesting.But "Therèse" redeemed him !
Shot in black and white ,with beautiful forest landscapes,this is an overlooked movie.Overshadowed by the new wave movies that were released by the dozen at the time,it could not appeal to the "conventional" audience either.Its slow pace,its rather risqué subject may have repelled most of the people.But it's about time to restore it to public favor.The story may be a fight between two men for a woman;but it is also the clash between two ideologies.
It proves that Romy Schneider was a great actress well before her heyday in the seventies:here,she definitively relinquishes her former insipid roles,the likes of Sissi to a modern woman.Henri Serre,who was Jim in Truffaut's "jules and Jim" gives a heartfelt and sensitive performance.Too bad he fell into oblivion soon after it.
Alain Cavalier started strongly with "le combat dans l'île" ,continued in the same vein with "l'insoumis" (1964)(starring Alain Delon and Léa Massari),but was disappointing afterward.Only "un étrange voyage" (1980) and "le plein de super"(1975)
are interesting.But "Therèse" redeemed him !
'New Wave, 'Neo-Noir', 'political thriller' or 'romantic melodrama'? Whatever label one choses to attach to this film it represents a highly assured directorial debut by Alain Cavalier. By all accounts it was made 'under the supervision' of Louis Malle although how much influence he exerted and to what extent he contributed is impossible to establish.
Cavalier's next film, the brilliant 'L'Insoumi', used as a backdrop the Algerian War of Independence. In the film under review this conflict is neither mentioned nor alluded to but the leading character Clement belongs to an extremist right-wing organisation which one assumes is a reference to the OAS that was formed just one year earlier in an attempt to foil Algerian self-determination. After having failed in an attempt to bump off a left-wing politician Clement realises he has been betrayed and is nominated by other members of his group to track the traitor to South America and kill him. His wife Anne, with whom he has a volatile and rather violent relationship, tells him that if he goes she never wishes to see him again. In his absence she falls in love with and is pregnant by Paul, a lifelong friend of Clement. When Clement returns and hears the news he challenges Paul to a duel........ This was a good phase for Henri Serre who plays Paul as 'Jules et Jim' was released the previous year. He had a minor role in Malle's 'Le Feu Follet' the following year but it is hard to find any film thereafter as effective which is a pity. Jean-Louis Trintignant, one of France's greatest living actors, brings his own air of mystery and unpredictability to the part of Clement. It is not too fanciful I am sure to connect this role with that of the fascist Marcello in Bertolucci's 'Il Conformista' eight years later. The film really belongs to Romy Schneider as Anne. At first she appears to be the passive wife and little more than the obligatory 'love interest' but her character develops strongly and becomes the driving force. Her qualities as an actress are manifold and of course the camera absolutely adores her. The next few years provided nothing comparable but her career was revitalised by 'Les Choses de ma Vie' for Claude Sautet. Excellent script by Cavalier and Jean-Paul Rappeneau with gorgeous, grainy cinematography by the masterful Pierre L'Homme. Cavalier maintains a 'lento' rhythm throughout which allows the characters to breathe whilst never allowing the momentum to slacken. If you liked this, you will love 'L'Insoumi'.
As Cavalier's debut not despicable picture mixing political issues and dramatic tragic drama, in a slow pace by the way, the story should be concise, offer more practicality instead some useful boring sequences, though don't expect see an eloquent Romy Schneider, she plays Anne a disturbed girl, going to nowhere, Trintignant plays Clement a rich son of great French industrialist who makes part of a right-wind terrorist cell, cover up by Hunting private club leading by a veteran terrorist Serge (Pierre Asso) they target are left-wing politicians and reds, they first target is a famous politician that end up in a flop, Clement is betrayed by Serge, meanwhile he and Anne hidden at Paul's house, (Henri Serre) actually a blood brothers when they were teenagers, Clement decides chase Serge to kill him, Anne stays there for a while, although both in absolute aloneness will getting closing each other, Clement finds Serge in a faraway Argentina, got his revenge and get back, now faces the unexpected truth, Anne is pregnancy of Paul, spurned Clement demands a duel at Island at river Senne, according Clement Paul broken the pact made on their childhood, dispersive the picture seems lost the central point often, overall a decent presentation!!!
Resume:
First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.25
Resume:
First watch: 2020 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 7.25
Le Combat dans l'île is a political film (at least in its clothing) about a reactionary, the racist Clément (Jean-Louis Trintignant); his childhood friend Paul (Henri Serre), left-wing printer; and love interest Anne (Romy Schneider).
Clément and Anne are in a rut, she an ex-actress, now a kept woman, he a son of a wealthy industrialist, very serious and eager to kill lefty politicians. She likes to pass herself around, wedding ring or no, he treats her as if she were personal property, they are deserving of one another.
Anne's slatternly behaviour appears to be foreplay for unhealthy sex as Clément physically abuses her and she submits. Trintignant is not really up to the part, not in the mindset of the character, but Schneider really wows. The movie is imbued with an almost unhealthy enthusiasm for her beauty and energy, she pelts the camera with daisies, as it pursues her. That is the soul of the movie, images of Romy Schneider. For more after this fashion see her in L'enfer d'Henri-Georges Clouzot, a documentary containing footage from an extremely ambitious Clouzot production that collapsed as a result of obsession. L'enfer is the concept of fascination with Romy Schneider taken to ruinous extremes.
These early scenes are accompanied by an ominous and weary soundtrack, which was very noirish. I would have been perfectly content for the movie to continue in this manner and end fatalistically, but the film increasingly goes for a political angle. That is to say the movie becomes about Anne's growth and she redeems herself under the wing of Paul.
This second half of the movie is dissatisfying, firstly in that it is quite "on the nose" politically, Clément is shown as being part of a shady international network of fascists holding old grudges, whereas of course Paul lives the simple life. Clément's communist equivalents were just as militant and obscure, but the movie doesn't show this. The element of personal growth here is also not very satisfying, generally in the bildungsroman form you get personal growth being achieved only by painstaking efforts, Anne here is doing little more than changing bedfellows and having a nice stay in the country on Paul's tab.
The action sequence at the end of the film (which the title refers to) is handled with an absolute minimum of suspense and is bizarrely anticlimactic. My own view is that there were conflicting desires from producer and director, Malle wanted to make a political film (a shot across the bow to other directors who supported the French occupation of Algeria), Cavalier is interested in getting as much footage of Schneider as possible. Watch Cavalier's diary film Irène to see how extremely fascinated he is by womanly beauty: "Oh beautiful woman, intelligent and lively, who confirms the planet's faith in the quality of the human race." Filming beautiful and intelligent women like Romy Schneider can become the entire point of a movie and I think Le Combat dans l'île is an example of this. Purists such as myself resent the awkward trappings and pretence in the film that distract from its real nature.
Clément and Anne are in a rut, she an ex-actress, now a kept woman, he a son of a wealthy industrialist, very serious and eager to kill lefty politicians. She likes to pass herself around, wedding ring or no, he treats her as if she were personal property, they are deserving of one another.
Anne's slatternly behaviour appears to be foreplay for unhealthy sex as Clément physically abuses her and she submits. Trintignant is not really up to the part, not in the mindset of the character, but Schneider really wows. The movie is imbued with an almost unhealthy enthusiasm for her beauty and energy, she pelts the camera with daisies, as it pursues her. That is the soul of the movie, images of Romy Schneider. For more after this fashion see her in L'enfer d'Henri-Georges Clouzot, a documentary containing footage from an extremely ambitious Clouzot production that collapsed as a result of obsession. L'enfer is the concept of fascination with Romy Schneider taken to ruinous extremes.
These early scenes are accompanied by an ominous and weary soundtrack, which was very noirish. I would have been perfectly content for the movie to continue in this manner and end fatalistically, but the film increasingly goes for a political angle. That is to say the movie becomes about Anne's growth and she redeems herself under the wing of Paul.
This second half of the movie is dissatisfying, firstly in that it is quite "on the nose" politically, Clément is shown as being part of a shady international network of fascists holding old grudges, whereas of course Paul lives the simple life. Clément's communist equivalents were just as militant and obscure, but the movie doesn't show this. The element of personal growth here is also not very satisfying, generally in the bildungsroman form you get personal growth being achieved only by painstaking efforts, Anne here is doing little more than changing bedfellows and having a nice stay in the country on Paul's tab.
The action sequence at the end of the film (which the title refers to) is handled with an absolute minimum of suspense and is bizarrely anticlimactic. My own view is that there were conflicting desires from producer and director, Malle wanted to make a political film (a shot across the bow to other directors who supported the French occupation of Algeria), Cavalier is interested in getting as much footage of Schneider as possible. Watch Cavalier's diary film Irène to see how extremely fascinated he is by womanly beauty: "Oh beautiful woman, intelligent and lively, who confirms the planet's faith in the quality of the human race." Filming beautiful and intelligent women like Romy Schneider can become the entire point of a movie and I think Le Combat dans l'île is an example of this. Purists such as myself resent the awkward trappings and pretence in the film that distract from its real nature.
Did you know
- TriviaLouis Malle produced the film as a criticism of Jean-Luc Godard and other then-right wing New Wave directors and their support for the French occupation of Algeria and for the OAS and their campaign of terrorism and assassination in mainland France.
- GoofsEarly in the movie, when Clément is in his car with his wife, the steering wheel is white. In a later scene, around 24:00 minutes, when he's in the car with Serge, the steering wheel is black.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Romy et Alain, les éternels fiancés (2022)
- How long is Le combat dans l'île?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Fire and Ice
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $50,039
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $10,217
- Jun 14, 2009
- Gross worldwide
- $50,039
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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