France film school
1960
bw 84 min.
Director: Francois Truffaut
CLV: $49.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog # CC1143L
VHS: available from Home Vision Cinema
When
Francois Truffaut's first feature The 400 Blows made its
debut in 1959, critics the world over hailed its low-key
semi-documentary style in telling its tale of a troubled, melancholy
youth. You can imagine then the confusion these same critics felt the
next year when confronted with the French filmmaker's next work,
Shoot the Piano Player. A wild mixture of gangster thriller,
slapstick comedy, and bittersweet romance, Shoot the Piano
Player was one of the signal works of the French "New Wave," but
it took a while for some critics and audiences to get used to a film
that flew in the face of traditional dramatic expectations so broadly
and mixed genre elements so freely.Hailed today as a modern
classic, Shoot the Piano Player is a pluperfect example of a
film "ahead of its time." Based on a novel by David Goodis (an
American "pulp" writer beloved by the French), it tells of an
introverted pianist who after his wife's suicide (an event for which
he holds himself responsible) forgoes a promising concert career to
play rinkytink piano in a small-time dive. Thinking himself freed from
the horrors of the outside world, he finds himself face to face with
them again as his criminal brother and the woman he loves draw him --
by different routes -- into a web of underworld intrigue. A dire
scenario on paper, on screen this same action is transformed by
Truffaut into a work that is by turns romantic, suspenseful, and --
oddly -- uproariously funny. Like Godard's Breathless it
captures perfectly the worldweary alienation and flip cynical humor
that were the hallmarks of early sixties filmmaking.
In a way, what
makes Shoot the Piano Player so successful is, ironically, the
very thing its detractors objected to so strenuously -- its masterful
mixture of different dramatic tones. In the film's opening scene, for
example (Chapter 1), we're flung right into the midst of action as the
camera follows a running figure being pursued down a street by unseen
assailants. Before we're even told who this man is, we meet someone
else -- a passerby who collides with the man on the run. The two men
talk and we learn the passerby's story -- he's an ordinary man on his
way home to a wife he loves very much. This figure vanishes from the
action, never to be seen again. But the tale he tells sets a mood of
melancholy regret that is central to everything Shoot the Piano
Player is trying to evoke.
This sense of action seen from a
slightly off-kilter angle continues in the next scene as we learn of
the identity of the running figure -- he's the brother to the film's
hero Charlie Kohler (Charles Aznavour). Now we're in the bar where
this small, timid man plies his trade -- a rowdy place filled with
characters out of a Mack Sennett slapstick two-reeler (Chapters 2 and
3). The mood changes again to romance when Charlie discovers Lena
(Marie Dubois), the brassy barmaid who loved him from afar (Chapter
4). It goes back again to comedy when the gunmen pursuing Charlie's
brother put the squeeze on Charlie and Lena (Chapter 6). Then the
mystery melodrama takes over (Chapters 7 and 8) when a flashback
reveals the truth about Charlie and the circumstances that brought him
to his withdrawn state.
If you have been following the twists and
turns of the film's rapid mood swings up to this point, you'll have no
trouble following things straight through to the film's extraordinary
finale -- a shootout at a mountain cabin right out of High
Sierra. But that Humphrey Bogart classic did not feature gunmen
who behaved like the Keystone Kops. And it did not sport a visual
delicacy suggestive of the finest work of D. W. Griffith.
In the
last analysis, Shoot the Piano Player is a completely unique
motion picture. From the originality of the audition scene (Chapter
7), where Charlie's doubts about himself are dramatized with stark
visual simplicity (rather than the usual route of verbal monologue),
to the tart cheekiness of its many "in" jokes (the watch the gunmen
carry plays the theme from Lola Montes), Truffaut teaches us to
expect the unexpected. He is helped immeasurably by the performances
of Charles Aznavour, Marie Dubois, and Nicole Berger in the principal
roles, with Raoul Coutard's beautiful black-and-white cinematography
and Georges Delerue's unforgettable score perfectly complementing the
overall atmosphere.
Taking us to the heart of existential anguish,
Shoot the Piano Player is never grim. It may show us the dark
underside of city life, but it is somehow quite unsordid. Daring to
make us laugh at people in decidedly unfunny circumstances, the film
manages to catch that laughter in mid-air and overlay it with a sense
of sadness -- without killing the joke. The story may be simple, the
characters easy to comprehend, but an atmosphere of mystery -- about
people, their lives, their sense of self -- remains, making Shoot
the Piano Player a film of enduring fascination.
-- DAVID
EHRENSTEIN
Credits
Director: Francois
Truffaut
Producer: Pierre Braunberger
Adaptation: Francois
Truffaut, Marcel Moussy
From the novel Down There by: David
Goodis
Director of Photography: Raoul Coutard
Production
Supervisor: Serge Komor
Production Manager: Roger
Fleytoux
Editors: Claudine Bouche, Cecile Decugis
English
Titles: Noelle Gillmor
Original Music: Georges Delerue
The song
"Dialogue d'Amoureux" by: Felix Leclerc
Arranged by: Felix
Leclerc, Lucienne Vernay
Transfer
This edition of
Shoot the Piano Player was transferred from a 35mm master print
in its original widescreen aspect ratio of 2.35:1.