alr

Touchez pas au grisbi
(Hands Off the Loot)

Directed by Jacques Becker.
With Jean Gabin, Jeanne Moreau, Lino Ventura.
France, 1954, DCP, black & white, 94 min.
French with English subtitles.
DCP source: Rialto Pictures

Becker’s smart, subtle film unfolds with the same undetectable skill and ease with which Jean Gabin’s gangster Max conducts his ambiguously unsavory business. At this point, Becker was also—unknowingly—nearing the end of his career, and the wise filmmaker, like Max, sees that everything is well-planned and well-executed: no flash or flamboyance unless absolutely necessary. Though just as riveting and romantic as any action-packed noir, Touchez pas au grisbi tenderly lingers on the more mundane moments in the lives of aging gangsters. And even the normalcy may not be what it appears; it could be a grounding ritual or a protective front. For Max, these might be indistinguishable. Whether taking out his reading glasses, putting on his pajamas, romancing a beautiful woman or killing a duplicitous partner in crime, Max is calm, charming and indecipherable. He has settled into a comfortable life, hopefully secured by a last big heist committed before the film begins, yet his loyalty to his best friend could compromise this retirement. With its melancholic air, the complex bouquet of Becker’s modern masterpiece slyly catches its audience off-guard, less with the explosive violence of an ambush than with its quiet emotion.

Part of film series

Read more

Rediscovering Jacques Becker

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

Música de Câmara. The Cinema of Rita Azevedo Gomes

Read more

From the Harvard Film Archive Collection …

Read more

People and their Virtue. Two Films by Wang Bing

Read more

Trenque Lauquen by Laura Citarella

Read more

I Heard It Through the Grapevine with James Baldwin

Read more

Filmmaker, Guest Worker: Zelimir Zilnik’s Expatriates

Read more

Adachi Masao’s Revolution+1

Read more

Out of the Ashes – The US-ROK Security Alliance & the Emergence of South Korean Cinema

Read more

Songs of Love and Loss. Elvira Notari’s Cinematic Realism