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Le pacha

  • 1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Le pacha (1968)
CrimeDrama

Six months before his retirement from the criminal police, inspector Joss finds his colleague Gouvion dead, in a poorly faked suicide attempt. Joss loses his temper, and investigates on his ... Read allSix months before his retirement from the criminal police, inspector Joss finds his colleague Gouvion dead, in a poorly faked suicide attempt. Joss loses his temper, and investigates on his own, which leads him through the bas-fond of Paris...Six months before his retirement from the criminal police, inspector Joss finds his colleague Gouvion dead, in a poorly faked suicide attempt. Joss loses his temper, and investigates on his own, which leads him through the bas-fond of Paris...

  • Director
    • Georges Lautner
  • Writers
    • Jean Laborde
    • Michel Audiard
    • Georges Lautner
  • Stars
    • Jean Gabin
    • Dany Carrel
    • Jean Gaven
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Georges Lautner
    • Writers
      • Jean Laborde
      • Michel Audiard
      • Georges Lautner
    • Stars
      • Jean Gabin
      • Dany Carrel
      • Jean Gaven
    • 16User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast52

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    Jean Gabin
    Jean Gabin
    • Comissaire Joss, le Pacha
    Dany Carrel
    Dany Carrel
    • Nathalie Villar
    Jean Gaven
    Jean Gaven
    • Marc
    André Pousse
    André Pousse
    • Quinquin
    Louis Arbessier
    • Le directeur chez Boucheron
    Gérard Buhr
    Gérard Buhr
    • Arsène
    Robert Dalban
    Robert Dalban
    • Inspecteur Gouvion
    Maurice Garrel
    Maurice Garrel
    • Brunet
    Pierre Koulak
    Pierre Koulak
    • Marcel le Coréen
    Pierre Leproux
    • Druber
    Frédéric de Pasquale
    • Alfred
    André Weber
    • Gino
    Yves Arcanel
    • Un inspecteur de la Police Judiciaire
    Maurice Auzel
    • Un homme de la bande à Émile
    Yves Barsacq
    Yves Barsacq
    • Médecin légiste
    Christian Bertola
    • Donadieu
    Michel Carnoy
    • Malevin
    Michel Charrel
    Michel Charrel
    • Un client chez Marcel
    • Director
      • Georges Lautner
    • Writers
      • Jean Laborde
      • Michel Audiard
      • Georges Lautner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.71.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Bunuel1976

    LE PACHA (Georges Lautner, 1968) ***

    This was another Jean Gabin vehicle which often turned up on Italian TV; having decided to check it out, I'm glad I did because it's a pretty good policier!

    Despite his advancing age, the star is wholly believable as the dogged Police Commissioner (the "Pacha" of the title) - out to avenge his childhood, albeit shady, friend - who's also something of an amiable curmudgeon. The film features an elaborate daylight robbery sequence - after which one member of the gang eliminates all his associates in order to keep the loot for himself (one of them is pushed inside his car onto thin ice which naturally breaks and engulfs him)! - and is fast-paced, and short, enough to never overstay its welcome. Besides, it's given a tremendous boost by a modern percussion-heavy score by celebrated performer/songwriter Serge Gainsbourg (who even appears as himself during a recording session of the tune heard over the opening credits!).

    There's also a hilarious scene in which the old-fashioned Gabin visits a hippie club - in search of a girl (Dany Carrel of MILL OF THE STONE WOMEN [1960]) who, apart from being a fling of Gabin's deceased colleague, is a link to the robbery mentioned above since she's the sister of one of the culprits (now also dead). Therefore, she and Gabin conspire to trap the man responsible for both deeds and the film ends with an indiscriminate shoot-out - punctuated by an ominous organ drone - in an abandoned warehouse (which curiously anticipates the climax of THE FRENCH CONNECTION [1971]!).
    8ONenslo

    Colorful and Stylish Crime Fantasy

    I think it an error to judge this film on plot alone - the story is the skeleton of a brightly stylized action fantasy which surely owes much to the garish Japanese crime films of the mid '60s. The police offices are not the grimy smoke-stained green-painted reality of battered wood desks and clattering file cabinets, but more nearly resemble the lair of the master-criminal with pivoting wall maps, poster-sized mug shots, and moving silhouettes cast on frosted glass walls. Police activity is a montage of blinking lights, fingers pressing buttons, walls of TV screens, streams of punched tape, and they thunder around the city in streamlined sports cars, not blocky grayish sedans. The inevitable night club is half surrealism, half agitprop performance, through which the stolid and always immaculate protagonist floats like an iceberg. The criminals drag their elaborate apparatus from the trunk of a huge sculptured American car and shoot gouts of flame and bazooka rockets in an eternally gray French winter, setting the snow itself on fire. They pour out of bright yellow mail trucks and blast machine guns at an army of police through obscuring clouds of drifting smoke. Le Pacha deserves to be viewed with fresh eyes because every scene and setting is stimulating and rewarding.
    Laurent Mousson

    Pretty good french gangster movie

    Well, it may possibly not have aged that well, notably the story line, that's pretty linear, but this film nevertheless has a few decent assets.

    First, the cast, granted you get Gabin playing lead, or rather freewheeling lead, but look at the rest of the cast : an impressive array of distinctive supporting actors, many of which can be spotted in many other films of the day, who do a spendid job in here, even when silent. For example, André Pousse has the perfect face for the ruthless gangster job he does in the movie.

    Second asset is the mood, a sort of sticky, foggy, terribly square version of the late sixties. The final scene in a rundown factory is truly awesome. This atmosphere is enhanced by Serge Gainsbourg's splendidly sober score (Gainsbourg himself appears in one scene, singing the striking "Requiem pour un con"), based on mesmerising percussion loops (way ahead of its time) or very gentle hammond organ parts. Oh and one song by Brigitte Bardot ("Harley Davidson") is also featured as background to one scene.

    Third, which can only be fully appreciated with a good command of French, is the script and dialogue, where Michel Audiard delivers some of his hilarious trademark one-liners, such as "le jour où on mettra les cons sur orbite, ben t'as pas fini de tourner" ["the day they'll put gits on orbit, you'll be far from stopping to revolve"], which rely on slang and adequate delivery to give an unmistakable texture to the lines.

    The only real downers here are the embarrassingly "hip" nightclub scenes, complete with sitar-laden raga-rock, that are pretty unwatchable to today's standards.

    Last point : it's pretty violent for its time, but in an almost choreographed way, which could in a way evoke "Spaghetti" Westerns or Sam Peckinpah's work...

    An enjoyable slice of 1960s french cinema, simply does the job.
    Kirpianuscus

    flavor of a time

    First, it is not the policier who you expect. against the same lines, Jean Gabin in a well known role and the last scenes. it is different for a simple reason - because the sentimental side is well developed, because the presence ( and music) of Serge Gainsbourg and for Dany Carrel performance. and for the flavor of a story political incorrect but solide and coherent and seductive. a film about the justice, friendship and choices. useful for old memories. and for the trip in the frame of a period, with its sensitivities, taste and options. a world. like an refuge.
    8elo-equipamentos

    When two worlds collide, a finest Polar picture mixing two opposite generation!!!

    Jean Gabin certainly one the most expressive French actor mostly as Chief of Police whom he embodies perfectly by his coldness and customary sarcasm, he plays the Commissioner Joss Le Pacha about to retirement, but when one of his closest childhood friend now an old Inspector Gouvion (Robert Dalban) was an easy prey on a Robbery, he has been blamed to have facilitate the whole thing, afterwards he is found dead, at first glance he'd allegedly committed suicide, Joss otherwise disagreed of such mindset, thus Joss is willing to prove despite Gouvion was slow and selfish he wasn't engaged in the robbery.

    Soon the cunning Commissioner Joss already gathered many clues that seem suggesting straightway into the rough felonious self-called Quinquin (André Pousse), meanwhile he digs all around he meets a Gouvion's lover, the young and beauty Nathalie Villar (Dany Carrel) which to afford Nathalie's life style Gouvion was making blind eye here and there for small offences, a bit bruised about the unforeseen Joss draw up a bold plan to get arrest Quinquin.

    The highlight of the movie quite sure are the phasing-out period on late sixties between the new wave of sexual liberalism attached into hippie phenomenon that grabbed the young generation, it's displeased deeply the old fashionable Commissioner that reproves such obnoxious odd behavior, moreover it was put on the screenplay trying display the conflict of two opposite ages, the colorful psychedelic ongoing at Europe against the old customs, so violent and exotic polar picture, directed by Georges Lautner, scored by a fine soundtrack for this period of time only.

    Thanks for reading.

    Resume:

    First watch: 2021 / How many: 1 / Source: DVD / Rating: 8.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The music score performed just before the armored truck heist sequence is the same the audience can hear in the film Z, in which there is a fighting sequence between two men on a tricycle carrier platform. The name of the music is Batucada Meurtrière and performed by Michel Colombier. It has never been mentioned anywhere. Only a close watching of those two scenes can notice that.
    • Quotes

      Comissaire Joss, le Pacha: The day they put jerks into orbit, you won't stop rotating soon!

    • Connections
      Featured in Les bruits de Recife (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Requiem pour un Con
      Music by Serge Gainsbourg

      Lyrics by Serge Gainsbourg

      Performed by Serge Gainsbourg

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 14, 1968 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Pasha
    • Filming locations
      • Beaurains-les-Noyon, Oise, France
    • Production companies
      • Société Nouvelle des Établissements Gaumont (SNEG)
      • Gafer
      • Rizzoli Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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