Showing posts with label Simenon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simenon. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 July 2022

The Man on the Eiffel Tower (1949)


There's a chase across the rooftops of Paris and a hair-raising scene in the high-up girders of the Eiffel Tower but not much else of interest in this 1949 Simenon book adaptation that has Charles Laughton's Maigret and the Paris police mostly just waiting and watching as the suspects in a murder investigation run around in circles.

★★★☆☆

CINECAL: ONE SENTENCE REVIEWS

Friday, 13 August 2021

Maigret's Night At The Crossroads (2017)

Perhaps Rowan Atkinson was trying here to present an especially sad Maigret given the story opens upon the funeral of a police colleague, but he is so flat, so deadpan, so morose - even more so than usual - that this episode of the usually thrilling 2016 and 2017 Maigret series is the rather flat and ponderous one of the four - at some points you wonder if the actors are speaking as slowly as they are just to try to stretch the story to movie-length and this lethargic pacing is at odds with the outlandish characters, one of them scarred and hissing like a Bond villain and another a stammering cartoon who do not fit well against the backdrop of gritty Paris and its mid-50s period detail.

★★☆☆☆

CINECAL: ONE SENTENCE REVIEWS

Friday, 30 March 2018

Maigret's Dead Man (2016)


It's not French and Rowan Atkinson isn't being funny but once you've got your head around these immediate incongruities, the 2016 series of Maigret tv movies is terrific viewing - fans of the Georges Simenon books and fans of tv murder mysteries in general will find the episodes as thrilling as they are taut (like the wee slips of the books, there is not a wasted word or moment) and the plots are deliciously grim, as is evident in this episode which features a death count of at least twenty - three remote farm massacres are somehow linked to the death of a man outside a cafe in the Place de la Concorde.


CINECAL: ONE SENTENCE REVIEWS

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