Dangerous Games (1958) Poster

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7/10
Forbidden games
dbdumonteil17 May 2005
Pierre Chenal was a minor but interesting director who in the late thirties was the first to transfer to the screen "the postman always rings twice".His masterpiece was "la foire aux chimères" (all Erich Von Stroheim's fans MUST see that work)where he introduced an extraordinary dreamlike atmosphere which we also find in inferior efforts such as " la maison du maltais" or "l'alibi".

"Les jeux dangereux" seems realistic at first sight.Actually ,it's almost as offbeat ,as unusual as the aforementioned films."Game" is the keyword and when he puts the pieces of the jigsaw together again that the private eye realizes that it's a child's game (the water pistol is the best "clue").

A teenage girl (a beautiful Pascale Audret,singer Hugues Aufray's sister, she resembles Audrey Hepburn),whose brother is in jail because he has shot a policeman,tries to get him the best lawyer.So helped by her pack ,she kidnaps an adolescent -poisoned by his mother's protection and whose father is a stingy hateful bourgeois-and they lock him in a cellar.So begins the game which will sometimes verge on tragedy.These youngsters (with the exception of Sami Frey's character,the only one who acts as a "man" so to speak).Everyone plays ,and after all,the victim himself plays the violin,plays cards with his jailer.The adults are not models for them anyway ,being mean like the rich kid's father,his over-possessive mother or the two-bit detective 's embittered wife.

Even the love story between Audret and her prisoner makes sense.And even if this is a rather happy end ,the establishment has won anyway.But the private eye's last words (it's my reward) restore our faith in grown -ups
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8/10
Be careful where you take your violin tutorials !!
nicholas.rhodes21 February 2001
Little known film from the fifties about a kidnapping by adolescents for money of a rich man's son who goes to take violin lessons in a popular quarter of Paris. The money is needed to pay for the legal costs of defending the brother of one of the girls who has committed a crime (shot a policeman). Mostly filmed in the Belleville area (like Le Ballon Rouge), though film reviews erroneously describe the area as Montmartre. This part of Paris was razed to the ground during the seventies and eighties and is now unrecognizeable since replaced by a large Park. In addition to the well made story, the film has documentary interest was being one of the best records of the Belleville Area of Paris. Unfortunately, it is only in Black and White. The actor who plays the kidnap victim, François Simon, is today a well-known TV presentor in France under the pseudonym of FABRICE. The film is well worth seeing for all of you who might be interested in 50's Paris (that was the best time to see the city) but is unavailable on videocassette or DVD.
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