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IMDbPro

Classe tous risques

  • 1960
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
Jean-Paul Belmondo, Sandra Milo, and Lino Ventura in Classe tous risques (1960)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:52
3 Videos
51 Photos
CrimeDramaRomanceThriller

A ruthless criminal flees from the pursuit, involving more and more casualties.A ruthless criminal flees from the pursuit, involving more and more casualties.A ruthless criminal flees from the pursuit, involving more and more casualties.

  • Director
    • Claude Sautet
  • Writers
    • José Giovanni
    • Claude Sautet
    • Pascal Jardin
  • Stars
    • Lino Ventura
    • Sandra Milo
    • Jean-Paul Belmondo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    4.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Claude Sautet
    • Writers
      • José Giovanni
      • Claude Sautet
      • Pascal Jardin
    • Stars
      • Lino Ventura
      • Sandra Milo
      • Jean-Paul Belmondo
    • 29User reviews
    • 61Critic reviews
    • 84Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos3

    Classe Tous Risques
    Trailer 3:52
    Classe Tous Risques
    Classe Tous Risques
    Trailer 1:23
    Classe Tous Risques
    Classe Tous Risques
    Trailer 1:23
    Classe Tous Risques
    Classe Tous Risques - Rialto Pictures Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    Classe Tous Risques - Rialto Pictures Trailer

    Photos51

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Lino Ventura
    Lino Ventura
    • Abel Davos
    Sandra Milo
    Sandra Milo
    • Liliane
    Jean-Paul Belmondo
    Jean-Paul Belmondo
    • Eric Stark
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Arthur Gibelin
    Michel Ardan
    • Riton Vintran
    Simone Desmaison
    • Thérèse Davos
    • (as Simone France)
    Michèle Méritz
    Michèle Méritz
    • Sophie Fargier
    Stan Krol
    Stan Krol
    • Raymond Naldi
    Evelyne Ker
    Evelyne Ker
    • La fille de Gibelin
    Betty Schneider
    Betty Schneider
    • La petite bonne
    France Asselin
    • Madame Vintran
    Jean-Pierre Zola
    Jean-Pierre Zola
    • Le patron de l'agence privée
    • (as J.P. Zola)
    Sylvain Levignac
    • Le détective de l'agence privée
    Jeanne Pérez
    • Jacqueline Chapuis
    René Génin
    René Génin
    • Chapuis
    Charles Blavette
    Charles Blavette
    • Bénazet
    Philippe March
    Philippe March
    • Jean Martin
    • (as Aimé de March)
    Corrado Guarducci
    • Ferucci
    • Director
      • Claude Sautet
    • Writers
      • José Giovanni
      • Claude Sautet
      • Pascal Jardin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    7.54.8K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    8claudio_carvalho

    The Last Days of a Gangster

    In Milan, the gangster Abel Davos (Lino Ventura) is sentenced to death "In absentia" and decides to return to France. Abel is a family man with wife Thérèse Davos (Simone France) and two sons, and his partner Raymond Naldi (Stan Krol) helps Abel and his family to flee to Nice. However Thérèse and Raymond are killed by the police and Abel uses his former friends in Paris to help him to go to Paris with his sons. They hire the driver Eric Stark (Jean-Paul Belmondo) to bring Abel and his kids to Paris in an ambulance. Along their journey, Eric helps the aspirant actress Liliane (Sandra Milo) on the road and she also goes to Paris in the ambulance. But soon Abel learns that he is alone and his friends when he was powerful will not help him and he counts only with the support of Eric. What will happen to him?

    "Classe tous risques" is a great film-noir with the story of the last days of a gangster. The plot shows that there is no code of honor or friendship after the fall of a powerful gangster. All his former friends do not help him when he needs. The conclusion is adequate for the whole situation. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil):"Como Fera Encurralada" ("Like Trapped Beast")
    10urigafni

    A true rarity

    Odd one should be able to stumble into "Classe Tous Risques" only by chance; it should be on any "best of film-noir" list, including IMDb's.

    Lino Ventura is as good as ever; knowing of his dire, delicate family situation gives extra weight to his almost expressionless face and brief dialogues. Belmondo's restrained performance under Sautet's firm direction only shows what a wonderful actor he could - and should -have been.

    "Classe Tous Risques" is utterly mininal, dry and cold, without Melville's artistic scenery, pretty faces and fancy cars. It is almost film-noir meet neo-realism. Davos' few, hard words to his children describing their life of secrecy from there on get a hold on your throat to the end of the film.

    The final sentence of the film - a voice-over telling of Davos' end in no more than ten dry, sombre words - leaves you with a hard punch in the stomach.

    A true jewel in the great crown of French film-noir.
    9noralee

    A Gritty Intersection of Gansters' Jobs and Domestic Lives

    "Classe tous risques" feels like the granddaddy of "The Sopranos" in mixing the criminal and the domestic, and of the buddy film to feel as contemporary as "Reservoir Dogs."

    Even as these gangsters are affectionately entangled with wives, children, lovers and parents, they are coldly ruthless, and we are constantly reminded they are, no matter what warm situation we also see them in. They can tousle a kid's hair - and then shoot a threat in cold blood. The key is loyalty, and the male camaraderie is beautifully conveyed, without ethnic or class stereotypes, even as their web of past obligations and pay backs narrows into suspicion and paranoia, as the old gang is in various stages of parole, retirement, out on bail or into new, less profitable ventures. An intense accusation is of sending a stranger to perform an old escape scenario. It is a high point of emotion when a wife is told off that she's not the one the gangster is friends with, while virtually the only time we hear music on the soundtrack is when he recalls his wife.

    Streetscapes in Italy and France are marvelously used, in blinding daylight to dark water and highways, from the opening set up of a pair of brazen robbers -- who are traveling with one's wife and two kids. Rugged, craggy Lino Ventura captures the screen immediately as the criminal dad. And the second thug is clearly a casually avuncular presence in their lives, as they smoothly coordinate the theft and escape, in cars, buses, on boats and motorcycles, in easy tandem. This is not the cliché crusty old guy softened with the big-eyed orphan; these are their jobs and their families and they intersect in horrific ways.

    The film pulls no punches in unexpectedly killing off characters, directly and as collateral damage, and challenging our sympathy for them, right through to the unsentimental end, which is probably why there was never an American remake.

    It seems so fresh that it's not until Jean-Paul Belmondo enters almost a third of the way into the film, looking so insouciant as a young punk, that one realizes that this is from 1960. Sultry Sandra Milo has smart and terrific chemistry with him, from an ambulance to an elevator to a hospital bed.

    While the Film Forum was showing a new 35 mm print with newly translated subtitles, it was not pristine. The program notes explained that the title refers to a kind of insurance policy and is pun on "tourist class."
    Bunuel1976

    CLASSE TOUS RISQUES (1960) - Italian TV Screening Review

    I have just watched on Italian TV the excellent crime drama CLASSE TOUS RISQUES (1960; aka: THE BIG RISK), directed by Claude Sautet and starring the late Lino Ventura (in one of his best roles) and a very young Jean-Paul Belmondo.

    This film came out at the tail end of a string of French gangster thrillers of the 50s, the most famous of which was, of course, Jules Dassin's seminal DU RIFIFI CHEZ LES HOMMES (1954; aka: RIFIFI). I haven't watched RIFIFI in a long time but I plan to acquire the Criterion DVD some time or other. In fact, I have only postponed it, really, because of the reported audio-synch problem present on the disc's first pressings and, being a non-U.S. resident, Criterion's policy dictates that no defective discs delivered outside Region 1 territories can be replaced! Still, in light of THE BIG RISK, I may risk it [sic] all the same!

    When the film came out it converged with a spate of Nouvelle Vague releases including Jean-Luc Godard's A' BOUT DE SOUFFLE (1960; aka: BREATHLESS) starring, of course, Jean-Paul Belmondo himself. It is easy to assume that his characterization in THE BIG RISK is nowhere near as iconic as his Laszlo Kovacs in Godard's film, but after all his is a supporting role (albeit pulled off with confidence and charm) and he is all too obviously overshadowed by the underrated Ventura, who dominates the film from beginning to end. Ventura was a regular in gangster films of the period: he was in Jacques Becker's masterful TOUCHEZ PAS AU GRISBI (1953; aka: HANDS OFF THE LOOT!) playing the main villainous role and in which he conducts an effective vis-à-vis with nominal star Jean Gabin, but he then took the lead for Jean-Pierre Melville's magnificent thriller set in WWII, L'ARMEE' DES OMBRES (1969; aka: ARMY OF SHADOWS).

    Incidentally, next week Criterion will release Melville's BOB LE FLAMBEUR (1955) and I hope they can put their hands on other films by this French master, notably LES ENFANTS TERRIBLES (1950), from the play by Jean Cocteau; LE DEUXIEME SOUFFLE (1966; aka: SECOND BREATH), also starring Lino Ventura; LE SAMOURAI (1967), his undisputed chef d'oeuvre; the aforementioned L'ARMEE' DES OMBRES and LE CERCLE ROUGE (1970; aka: THE RED CIRCLE). It is worth noting that the last two may very well be future Criterion DVDs. For the record, I have recorded ENFANTS, SAMOURAI, ARMEE' and CERCLE (which I have yet to watch) off French TV, along with the atypical LEON MORIN, PRETRE (1961) and the little-seen LE DOULOS (1962; aka: THE FINGER MAN), both of which star Jean-Paul Belmondo.

    To go back to THE BIG RISK, it was dismissed at the time as old-fashioned in light of the Nouvelle Vague, though the few stylistic touches it has are effective exactly because they are sparse and unexpected. After an explosive start, the film relaxes its grip for the first half in order to establish plot (somewhat unusual in its emphasis on the domestic problems of gangsters) and characterization (particularly in eliciting audience sympathy for the lone anti-hero). The plot does have its improbable turns: for example, Belmondo's and Sandra Milo's characters are a bit too good to be true, aiding Ventura without batting an eyelid (despite the obvious danger involved) just minutes after making his acquaintance, while the ending is a bit of a letdown (the film is abruptly interrupted and the plot resolved with a hurried voice-over explanation)...but Ventura's solid performance as a man betrayed, quietly desperate at first but driven eventually to sudden eruptions of violence, holds the film firmly together and makes THE BIG RISK a classic of its kind.

    Other films by Claude Sautet I have watched are LES CHOSES DE LA VIE (1969), MAX ET LES FERRAILLEURS (1971; aka: MAX AND THE SCRAP-MONGERS), CESAR ET ROSALIE (1972), all on Italian TV, and VINCENT, FRANCOIS, PAUL ET LES AUTRES (1974), which I have recorded off French TV. All of these are low-key yet very interesting and thought-provoking films, aided a great deal by a superb selection of actors (Michel Piccoli in CHOSES, MAX and VINCENT; Romy Schneider in the first three titles; and Yves Montand in the last two). VINCENT, FRANCOIS, PAUL ET LES AUTRES is perhaps Sautet's best film: it co-stars Serge Reggiani, Gerard Depardieu (one of his first), Marie Dubois and Stephane Audran (an extended cameo, really, but effective nonetheless).

    As I have said, I wish that some of the films I mentioned by Claude Sautet and Jean-Pierre Melville, including of course THE BIG RISK, will one day be released on DVD. Supplements for such films may be hard to come by, I guess, but a quality print in the Original Aspect Ratio with a transfer to match are the least we could expect for them. I know that some of the above-mentioned films are already available on French Region 2 DVD but unfortunately most of them do not carry English subtitles. Although I do have quite a basic knowledge of the French language, I am still not fluent enough to get by without any subtitles. However, I would very much like to read your opinions of French Region 2 DVDs and will affect a search through the Mobius archives for that purpose, though I may still have to post my queries about particular French DVDs which I am interested in purchasing in a new thread in this Forum in the near future.
    8dbdumonteil

    Better than Melville.

    "Classes tous risques" is one of the best "gangsters" films noirs France has ever produced.Perfect cast :Lino Ventura,a young Jean -Paul Belmondo (who made "a bout de souffle",Godard's thing, the same year),Marcel Dalio and a fine supporting cast ;brilliant script by José Giovanni -who also wrote "le trou" Becker's masterpièce the same year!What a year for him!;wonderful black and white cinematography by Ghislain Cloquet.And taut action,first-class directing by Claude Sautet,who surpasses Jean-Pierre Melville .Whereas the latter films gangsters movie with metaphysical pretensions,which sometimes lasts more than two hours,Claude Sautet directs men of flesh and blood,and the presence of the two children adds moments of extraordinary poignancy which Melville has never been able to generate .And Sautet avoids pathos,excessive sentimentality:the last time Ventura sees his children,coming down in the metro (subway)is a peak of restrained emotion.

    Ventura portrays a gangster whose die is cast when the movie begins.He thinks that he can rely on his former acquaintances ,but they are all cowards -we are far from manly friendship dear to Jacques Becker ("touchez pas au grisbi" ) which Melville was to continue throughout the sixties-sometimes abetted by mean women (the film noir misogyny par excellence),living in a rotten microcosm,ready to inform on -we are far from Jean Seberg's simplistic behavior in Godard's "opus"-.

    Cloquet works wonders with the picture:the scene on the beach in a starless night when the two children see their mother die after the shoot-out with the customs officers is absolutely mind-boggling.

    There's a good use of voice-over,which Sautet only uses when necessary;thus ,the last lines make the ending even stronger than if we have attended the scenes.

    Claude Sautet had found a good niche ,and he followed the "classes tous risques" rules quite well with his follow-up "l'arme à gauche" (1965) which featured Ventura again and made a good use of a desert island and a ship.Had he continued in that vein,France would have had a Howard Hawks.In his subsequent works ,only "Max et les ferrailleurs " (1971) showed something of the brilliance he displayed in the first half of the sixties.He had become ,from "les choses de la vie" onwards,the cinema de qualité director who used to focus on tender-hearted bourgeois in such works as "Cesar et Rosalie" (1972),"Vincent François ,Paul et les autres" (1974) or "Mado" (1976)

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Co-writer/Director Claude Sautet said after the shooting that he did not know that the Abel Davos - Danos - character was inspired by a gangster who collaborated with the Nazis against French resistance and Jews during German occupation.
    • Quotes

      Eric Stark: The best thing about me is my left hook.

    • Connections
      Featured in Claude Sautet ou La magie invisible (2003)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 10, 1960 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Official site
      • Newen (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Danger Ahead
    • Filming locations
      • Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France
    • Production companies
      • Mondex Films
      • Les Films Odéon
      • Filmsonor
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $132,928
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,945
      • Nov 20, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $132,928
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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