22 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- Good adaptation of a true story, 29 julio 2003
Author:
thegreatswan de L'Isle Jourdain, France
For those who didn't know the criminal history of France : Emile Buisson,
born in 1902, started his robbers' life during the 30's, with his older
brother. He get married, but his wife and their child died while he was
in
jail. And after this tragedy, Buisson became a killer. From jailhouses to
asylums, Buisson finally escaped in 1947. For three years, almost 20
people
were murdered, coldly, brutally shot by Emile. All victims of robberies,
or
thieves suspected for betraying Buisson. He was the first one in France
to
be called "P.E.n°1". It's these three years which are counted in "Flic
Story". The young inspector Borniche had a lot of work to do in order to
arrest Buisson. And he succeeded in 1950. And that wasn't the end. For
four
years, every crime was studied, dissected. In 1954, Buisson was condemned
to
die. Twice. On the dawn of February 28th, 1956, in the Santé Prison,
M.Obrecht, the executioner, released the guillotine's chopper on
Buisson's
neck.
But if Borniche hadn't wrote his book, nobody would even remember about
Buisson. The book is really good. So is the movie. Trintignant is
probably
too cute to play Buisson, but he gives a real performance : a real dead
cold
assassin. You have to like Delon, of course, even if he is great as
Borniche
! (I think he is unbearable !)
A good police movie !
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Brave attempt to apply 'arthouse' techniques to populist crime film.(possible spoilers), 19 febrero 2001
Author:
Alice Liddel (-darragh@excite.com) de dublin, ireland
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
'Flic' in French is slang for cop, and 'Flic Story' is a standard issue
police procedural - a maverick police inspector attempts to track down the
paranoid, trigger-happy psycho leader of a gang of thieves. This kind of
thing was enormously successful in France during the 1970s, and 'Flic'
follows the usual pattern: the dogged, even exhausting groundwork of
bureaucracy and investigation, punctuated by bursts of violence.
The film is based on a book by the hero, and the plot is offered as his
narrative through voiceover, with the film controlled by him, the random
shocks of a criminal mind and senseless disorder reassuringly contained.
Of course, this is a French crime movie, so it doesn't quite work out that
way. For a start, Roger Borniche, the police detective, may control the
narrative AFTER THE FACT, but within it he is helpless most of the time,
and
despite his evident brilliance and superiority, he is not quick enough to
avert a string of gratuitous murders.
Even when he finally succeeds in catching the killer, Emile Buisson, the
latter eludes his grasp. Not literally; the poor maniac is duly executed.
But the reassertion of order that should come about with his capture
doesn't
quite; there is no exorcism of evil, triumph of good. Roger is startled by
the sheer banality of his nemesis as he watches him handcuffed, reading the
rightist paper 'Le Figaro' , drinking wine. Words like 'psycho' and 'poor
maniac' are hopelessly inadequate. The film ends with a vanishing trick,
Buisson disappearing from the spot to which he was handcuffed. This, of
course, is an effect of memory - Buisson is literally not there, he's been
killed. But it's as if Roger has had him, but he couldn't catch him,
couldn't grab all the things he was supposed to represent.
This ghostly ending echoes the sequence of climactic capture. The scene is
the culmination of the genre narrative, the whole point of the plot -
excitement, tension, purpose and economy should be at their tantalising
pitch. And yet this climax seems to suspend itself from its plot - the
rarefied country setting after the Parisian man hunts; the 'disguises' worn
by the policemen, and the parts they play; the measured camerawork as
Catherine, Roger's fiancee, plays Edith Piaf on the piano to the
'monster''s
rapt attention, all create a haunting stillness quite at odds with genre
requirements.
Further, the film is set in 1947, less than half a decade after the
Occupation, during which the police were stooges of the SS. This ambiguity
is carried over here, the villain's random violence contrasted with the
systematic brutality of police 'questioning'. The police are frequently
compared to the Gestapo; Roger may protest at his colleagues' sadism, but
he
looks on; in one particularly nasty scene, he is like a dead man, staring,
his unpuffed cigarette eating itself up into ashes like his soul. Both
hero
and villain have interesting relationships with the Occupation that further
complicate their generic roles.
This film is deliberately populist, conceived as an Alain Delon star
vehicle. But it alludes to one of Delon's most famous films, 'Le
Samourai',
and uses some of Melville's techniques (his last work, also starring Delon
as the title character, was called 'Un Flic'), which, in his films, were
used to ends antipathetic to populism. The most obvious allusion is the
Metro scene where Delon/Roger and an enemy engage in a cat and mouse game.
More profoundly, Deray fragments his characters visually: Roger, even
though
the roles are reversed and he is the law-backed hunter, is repeatedly shot
as a pair of feet; Buisson the killer is never framed in the same shot as
his murder weapon, the shooting is always fragmented, as if it is apart
from
him, or as if the phallic power conferred by shooting is denied him; it is
suggested that his 'psychosis' is linked to sexual neurosis, even
suppressed
homosexuality. Roger is not free from this either; unlike 'Samourai''s Jef
Costello, he seems to have a stable domestic life, but he and his lover
sleep in separate rooms, and he is willing to sacrifice her as bait in a
potentially lethal sting. With her red hair, she is tacitly linked to the
gangsters' moll.
Of course, comparing 'Flic Story' to 'Le Samourai' only emphasises
Melville's genius. Deray copies Melville's downbeat style and rigorous
emphasis on doing things (lots of shots of people just walking, etc.), but
these are only superficials. He has little sense of composition or rhythm
through montage, never mind the latent metaphysical power of Melville.
This
leaves the 'slow' bits tedious where they are compelling in Melville, and
often unrelated to character. Paris looks lovely, though.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- An exceptional and realistic cop film, 28 febrero 2007
Author:
planktonrules de Bradenton, Florida
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
While the DVD case for this film described it as being "Film Noir", the
movie wasn't really Noir style but instead was a realistic film about a
real criminal without the snappy dialog you usually associate with
Noir. This isn't a complaint--after all, the film is very realistic and
exciting. But for lovers of the genre, understand the film isn't
stylistically a Noir film. The dialog, camera work and overall style of
the film just aren't at all reminiscent of classic Noir.
Emile Buisson was a sociopath who escaped from prison and went on a
robbery and killing spree that ultimately was responsible for almost
three dozen deaths! The film shows many of these brutal and unnecessary
murders--such as when he shot people who posed absolutely no risk to
him. He was super-cold and evil and fortunately, while the film
realistically portrayed him and his deeds, it was not grotesque or
gratuitous--and I appreciated this.
Roger Borniche was a famous cop ("flic") that was ordered to find and
capture Buisson. However capable and decent Borniche was, however,
Buisson was so brilliant and left no possible chance of capture
(killing anyone who might betray him) that apprehending him was very
difficult. The police work and how they eventually got him is shown in
this film.
In many ways, the film is almost a documentary fused with a traditional
drama. The skill of the actors (particularly Trintignant as Buisson)
and direction make this a wonderful film--very similar to the great
film, LE SAMOURAI, and is well worth your time.
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Flic Story (1975)
22 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-
Good adaptation of a true story, 29 julio 2003
Author: thegreatswan de L'Isle Jourdain, France
For those who didn't know the criminal history of France : Emile Buisson, born in 1902, started his robbers' life during the 30's, with his older brother. He get married, but his wife and their child died while he was in jail. And after this tragedy, Buisson became a killer. From jailhouses to asylums, Buisson finally escaped in 1947. For three years, almost 20 people were murdered, coldly, brutally shot by Emile. All victims of robberies, or thieves suspected for betraying Buisson. He was the first one in France to be called "P.E.n°1". It's these three years which are counted in "Flic Story". The young inspector Borniche had a lot of work to do in order to arrest Buisson. And he succeeded in 1950. And that wasn't the end. For four years, every crime was studied, dissected. In 1954, Buisson was condemned to die. Twice. On the dawn of February 28th, 1956, in the Santé Prison, M.Obrecht, the executioner, released the guillotine's chopper on Buisson's neck.
But if Borniche hadn't wrote his book, nobody would even remember about Buisson. The book is really good. So is the movie. Trintignant is probably too cute to play Buisson, but he gives a real performance : a real dead cold assassin. You have to like Delon, of course, even if he is great as Borniche ! (I think he is unbearable !) A good police movie !
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Brave attempt to apply 'arthouse' techniques to populist crime film.(possible spoilers), 19 febrero 2001
Author: Alice Liddel (-darragh@excite.com) de dublin, ireland
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
'Flic' in French is slang for cop, and 'Flic Story' is a standard issue police procedural - a maverick police inspector attempts to track down the paranoid, trigger-happy psycho leader of a gang of thieves. This kind of thing was enormously successful in France during the 1970s, and 'Flic' follows the usual pattern: the dogged, even exhausting groundwork of bureaucracy and investigation, punctuated by bursts of violence.
The film is based on a book by the hero, and the plot is offered as his narrative through voiceover, with the film controlled by him, the random shocks of a criminal mind and senseless disorder reassuringly contained. Of course, this is a French crime movie, so it doesn't quite work out that way. For a start, Roger Borniche, the police detective, may control the narrative AFTER THE FACT, but within it he is helpless most of the time, and despite his evident brilliance and superiority, he is not quick enough to avert a string of gratuitous murders.
Even when he finally succeeds in catching the killer, Emile Buisson, the latter eludes his grasp. Not literally; the poor maniac is duly executed. But the reassertion of order that should come about with his capture doesn't quite; there is no exorcism of evil, triumph of good. Roger is startled by the sheer banality of his nemesis as he watches him handcuffed, reading the rightist paper 'Le Figaro' , drinking wine. Words like 'psycho' and 'poor maniac' are hopelessly inadequate. The film ends with a vanishing trick, Buisson disappearing from the spot to which he was handcuffed. This, of course, is an effect of memory - Buisson is literally not there, he's been killed. But it's as if Roger has had him, but he couldn't catch him, couldn't grab all the things he was supposed to represent.
This ghostly ending echoes the sequence of climactic capture. The scene is the culmination of the genre narrative, the whole point of the plot - excitement, tension, purpose and economy should be at their tantalising pitch. And yet this climax seems to suspend itself from its plot - the rarefied country setting after the Parisian man hunts; the 'disguises' worn by the policemen, and the parts they play; the measured camerawork as Catherine, Roger's fiancee, plays Edith Piaf on the piano to the 'monster''s rapt attention, all create a haunting stillness quite at odds with genre requirements.
Further, the film is set in 1947, less than half a decade after the Occupation, during which the police were stooges of the SS. This ambiguity is carried over here, the villain's random violence contrasted with the systematic brutality of police 'questioning'. The police are frequently compared to the Gestapo; Roger may protest at his colleagues' sadism, but he looks on; in one particularly nasty scene, he is like a dead man, staring, his unpuffed cigarette eating itself up into ashes like his soul. Both hero and villain have interesting relationships with the Occupation that further complicate their generic roles.
This film is deliberately populist, conceived as an Alain Delon star vehicle. But it alludes to one of Delon's most famous films, 'Le Samourai', and uses some of Melville's techniques (his last work, also starring Delon as the title character, was called 'Un Flic'), which, in his films, were used to ends antipathetic to populism. The most obvious allusion is the Metro scene where Delon/Roger and an enemy engage in a cat and mouse game.
More profoundly, Deray fragments his characters visually: Roger, even though the roles are reversed and he is the law-backed hunter, is repeatedly shot as a pair of feet; Buisson the killer is never framed in the same shot as his murder weapon, the shooting is always fragmented, as if it is apart from him, or as if the phallic power conferred by shooting is denied him; it is suggested that his 'psychosis' is linked to sexual neurosis, even suppressed homosexuality. Roger is not free from this either; unlike 'Samourai''s Jef Costello, he seems to have a stable domestic life, but he and his lover sleep in separate rooms, and he is willing to sacrifice her as bait in a potentially lethal sting. With her red hair, she is tacitly linked to the gangsters' moll.
Of course, comparing 'Flic Story' to 'Le Samourai' only emphasises Melville's genius. Deray copies Melville's downbeat style and rigorous emphasis on doing things (lots of shots of people just walking, etc.), but these are only superficials. He has little sense of composition or rhythm through montage, never mind the latent metaphysical power of Melville. This leaves the 'slow' bits tedious where they are compelling in Melville, and often unrelated to character. Paris looks lovely, though.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

An exceptional and realistic cop film, 28 febrero 2007
Author: planktonrules de Bradenton, Florida
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
While the DVD case for this film described it as being "Film Noir", the movie wasn't really Noir style but instead was a realistic film about a real criminal without the snappy dialog you usually associate with Noir. This isn't a complaint--after all, the film is very realistic and exciting. But for lovers of the genre, understand the film isn't stylistically a Noir film. The dialog, camera work and overall style of the film just aren't at all reminiscent of classic Noir.
Emile Buisson was a sociopath who escaped from prison and went on a robbery and killing spree that ultimately was responsible for almost three dozen deaths! The film shows many of these brutal and unnecessary murders--such as when he shot people who posed absolutely no risk to him. He was super-cold and evil and fortunately, while the film realistically portrayed him and his deeds, it was not grotesque or gratuitous--and I appreciated this.
Roger Borniche was a famous cop ("flic") that was ordered to find and capture Buisson. However capable and decent Borniche was, however, Buisson was so brilliant and left no possible chance of capture (killing anyone who might betray him) that apprehending him was very difficult. The police work and how they eventually got him is shown in this film.
In many ways, the film is almost a documentary fused with a traditional drama. The skill of the actors (particularly Trintignant as Buisson) and direction make this a wonderful film--very similar to the great film, LE SAMOURAI, and is well worth your time.
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