Friday, July 10, 2020
#129 - Le Trou
So back to some fun stuff - this is a thrilling prison break film set in the La Sante Prison Paris.
I guess we're lucky to have the Criterion Channel as this is out of print and even the website doesn't have any essays on it - sorta slipped thru the cracks but I enjoyed this more than most of the films in the first half of the 100's so far
So one of the things I didn't know was at the beginning, one of the characters looks up from a car he is fixing, addresses the camera and says this is his true story of a prison break - (the 2nd guy on this DVD cover) - so a couple things..
This is based on a book that was based on a true story of a convict escape from this prison..
and, get this, this guy IS THE CONVICT who helped plan that escape and served as a consultant and under a stage name basically agreed to act the part he played in the escape - he seemed familiar to me and I thought he was an actor, but he was the real deal - which may be the most incredible "appearing as himself" cameo I've ever heard of :)
So, of course, what we have here is a prison break film - 4 guys get a new fifth guy and so they're going thru the motions of getting out as well as figuring out if the new guy is good news or bad news. One of the things that struck me in this film are the long monotonous prison sequences - there is a 4 minute prison sequence banging thru concrete, and there's a long 2-3 minute sequence of a guard unlocking a cell, letting someone exit, on to the next cell, etc. I suppose here we're catching the monotony of prison life, but during the concrete breaking, you're also freaking out that they can make this much noise in a cell without being caught and can they get away with it and the suspense keeps you on edge
Obviously I'm not going to spoil the film but it was very suspenseful and entertaining to watch Something else that struck me, and it's probably fictional, was the easy way the convicts and guards got along - it felt more like Hogan's Heroes than the prison environments we're familiar with today.
This is the first time I've heard of Jacques Becker, the director but he was assistant director on The Grand Illusion - (all the way back to spine #1) and this was his last film, from what it appears. Obviously being French, and a dramatic sort of heist, it reminded me a lot of Rififi, especially the scenes where the illicit acts are carrying out - but the tension runs pretty high, and it's a really good film
on we go
RB
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