Amazon Prime is currently streaming the acclaimed 1968 French crime thriller "Farewell, Friend" ("Adieu, L'Ami"). The movie was instrumental in elevating Charles Bronson from supporting roles to leading man status. Here is Cinema Retro columnist Brian Hannan's review of the film from his web site "The Magnificent 60s".
By Brian Hannan
This heist
picture made Charles Bronson a star, though, like Clint Eastwood a few years
previously, he had to go to Europe, in this case France, to find an audience
appreciable of his particular skill set. This was such a box office smash in
France that it was the reason that Once
upon a Time in the West (1968), a major flop virtually everywhere
else, turned into a huge hit in Paris. After a decade as a supporting actor,
albeit in some quality offerings like The
Magnificent Seven (1960), The
Great Escape (1963) and The
Dirty Dozen (1967), Bronson developed a big following, if only
initially in Europe.
Farewell,
Friend
could also lay fair claim to stealing the title of “first buddy movie”
from the following year’s Butch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) because, apart from the heist
that is central to the story, it is essentially about the forging of a
friendship. But it wasn’t released in the U.S. for another five years, in the
wake of Bronson’s Hollywood breakthrough in The
Valachi Papers (1972), and then under a different title, Honor Among Thieves.
And you can
see why it was such a star-making vehicle. Bronson goes toe-to-toe with
France’s number one male star Alain Delon (The
Sicilian Clan, 1969). He had the walk and the stance and the look
and he was given acres of screen time to allow audiences to fully appreciate
for the first time what he had to offer. Like Butch Cassidy, the duo share a lot of screen
time, and after initial dislike, they slowly turn, through circumstance and the
same code of honor, into friends.
Dino Barran
(Alain Delon) is the principled one, after a final stint as a doctor in the
French Foreign Legion originally turning down overtures from Franz Propp
(Charles Bronson) to become involved in a separate major robbery. Propp is an
unsavory customer, making his living as a small-time thief who uses a stripper
to dupe wealthy marks. Barran plans to rob a corporation’s safe during the
three-day Xmas holiday of two million dollars as a favor to the slinky widow
Isabelle (Olga Georges-Picot) of a former colleague, for whose death he retains
guilt. Propp more or less barges his way into the caper.
It’s a
clever heist. Isabelle gets Barran a job as a company doctor whose office is
next door to the giant vault. But there’s a twist. Surveillance reveals only
three of the seven numbers required to open the combination to the vault. But
Barran reckons three days is sufficient to try out the 10,000 possible
permurations.
Barran and
Propp despise each other and pass the time playing juvenile tricks, locking
each other into a room, stealing all the food from the one dispensing machine,
winding each other up, while they take turns trying different combinations. But
it opens after only 3,400 attempts and they face a shock. The vault is empty.
They have been set up to take the fall for a previous robbery that must have
been completed before the building closed for Xmas.
And there’s
no way out. They are in lockdown, deep in a basement. The elevators can only be
opened by a small squadron of guards upstairs. Food long gone, they are going
to run out of water. If they use a lighter to see in the dark, or build a fire
to get warm, the flames will eat up the oxygen they need to survive in the
enclosed space. So the heist turns into a battle for survival and brute force
attempts to escape before the building re-opens and they are discovered,
exhausted and clearly guilty.
But that’s
only the second act. There is a better one to follow, as their friendship is
defined in an unusual manner. And there are any number of twists to maintain
the suspense and tension. Butch
Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were close friends when that western
began. Here, we see the evolution of a friendship between two forceful
characters who express their feelings with their fists.
Delon was a
known quantity, but Bronson really comes to the fore, more than holding his own
against a top star who oozed charisma. This is Bronson in chrysalis, the
emergence of the tough guy leading man screen persona that would turn him into
one of the biggest stars in the world. Surprisingly, given his later penchant
for the monosyllabic, here he does a lot of talking, perhaps more actual acting
than he ever did later when his roles tended to fall into a stereotype.
He has the
two best scenes, both character-defining, but in different ways. He has a
little scam, getting people to gamble on how many coins it would take for an
already full-to-the-brim glass to overflow when a certain number of coins were
dropped in. While this is a cute trick, it’s that of a small-time con artist,
but watching it play out, as it does at critical moments, is surprisingly
suspenseful. The second is the strip scene which shows him, as a potential
leading man, in a very poor light, and although thievery is the ultimate aim,
it is not far short of pimping, with Bronson standing back while the woman
(Marianna Falk) is routinely humiliated. It’s the kind of scene that would be
given to a supporting actor, for whom later redemption was not on the cards. It
says something for Bronson’s command of the screen and the development of his
character that by the end of the picture the audience has long forgotten that
he could stoop so low.
It is a film
of such twists I would not want to say much more for fear of giving away too
much, suffice to say that Olga Georges-Picot (Je T’Aime, Je T’Aime, 1968) and her friend,
mousy nurse Dominique (Brigitte Fossey, in her grown-up debut), are also
stand-outs, and not just in the sense of their allure.
Director
Jean Herman, in his sophomore outing, takes the bold step of dispensing with
music virtually throughout, which means that during the critical heist sequence
the audience is deprived of the usual musical beats that might indicate threat
or suspense or change of mood, but which has the benefit of keeping the camera
squarely on the two leading characters without favoring either. Most pictures
focusing on character rely on slow-burn drama. In the bulk of heist pictures,
characters appear fully-formed. Here, unusually, and almost uniquely in the
movie canon, character development takes place during an action film.
Top French
thriller writer Sebastian Japrisot (The
Sleeping Car Murder, 1965) was responsible along with Herman for
the screenplay. Japrisot was a key figure in the French movie thriller scene,
churning out, either as original novels or original screenplays, A Trap for Cinderella
(1965), Rider on the Rain
(1970) and The Lady in the
Car with the Glasses and the Gun (1970).
Even without
Bronson, this would have been a terrific heist picture. With him, it takes on a
new dimension.
Click here to order Kino Lorber Blu-ray from Amazon