Watched: 07/27/2025
Format: 4K disc
Viewing: First
Director: Jean-Pierre Melville
So, there's a whole bunch of Criterion movies on sale on Amazon, and I wasn't doing much this weekend, so I got silly and justified the expense on this movie. Because.
Leave me alone. Sometimes I do things.
If you've never dipped your toe in French noir, or only watched Breathless, the French noir movement is fascinating as it's so clearly done with love for and homage to American noir (which the French coined - we just called them crime movies). I assume American culture was imported via Hollywood in the post-war years as American GI's rambled around Europe and France took a minute to get its film industry fired up again. But the American movies are refracted through the lens of a nation crawling out from occupation, and maybe contain the spirit which gave us Camus.
I mean, one of the French noir films I'd rec is called Elevator to the Gallows. Fate vs. freewill and existential dread hangs heavy on the minds of these movies - more so than American films mostly being about "don't pursue the wrong dame".
Le Cercle Rouge (1970) is a crime/ heist movie in which we're told at the outset, before we meet any characters "these people will come together, and it will go very badly, indeed". And, that is what happens.