First half pure Walter Hill of The Driver vintage – virtually silent heist, blistering car chase – second half rachets up tension with corrupt cop, femme fatale, getaway stymied and a payoff you won’t see coming.
French jewel thieves led by Azad (Jean-Paul Belmondo) using electronic wizardry crack open a safe in Athens full of emeralds while the owner is away. Passing cop Abel (Omar Sharif) happens by but after conversing with Azad, who claims his car has broken down, seems to be satisfied nothing untoward is going on inside the house. But getaway plans are momentarily foiled when the ship they are due to leave on is unexpectedly berthed for repairs, leaving them with five days on their hands.

Azed’s disappointed girlfriend Helene (Nicole Coffen), who acts as watch for the gang, lolling about a swimming pool with too much time on her hands, attracts unwanted male gaze. Azad, followed by the cop, decides to outrun him, fast car style, and soon they are hurtling through the streets of Athens. Thinking that he’s shaken off his pursuer, and seeking a bit of relaxation himself, Azad chats up glamor model and night-club stripper Lena (Dyan Cannon) without realizing she is in cahoots with Abel. The cop wants in on the action and is willing to trade by letting Azad off scot-free while dumping the crime onto his confederate Ralph (Robert Hosein).
So, mostly, it’s cat-and-mouse stuff between Azad and Abel, as the latter closes the doors, and the former is unaware of just how cunning a corrupt cop can be. There’s some hair-raising action as Azad has to jump between two buses, and a pursuit in a fairground, Abel naturally on horseback, and as if this was one of those cheap films that always had a shoot-out in a quarry, Azad ends up in one, though, thankfully, not for climactic reasons. The climax takes place in a wheat warehouse (I guess the makers of the later Witness, 1985, took a few clues from this.)

Mostly, it’s the character interplay. Two big stars in one film often results in scenes involving both kept to a minimum – think Paul Newman and Steve McQueen in The Towering Inferno (1974) or Robert De Niro and Al Pacino in Heat (1995) – but here’s it’s the opposite and watching Belmondo and Sharif dancing around each other, one or other always in the ascendancy or with a neat trick in the back pocket or a get-out-of-jail-free card for later, works a treat.
Sharif, especially, had widened his scope, running away from the matinee idol tag and this came at the end of an impressive stint that included the villain in Mackenna’s Gold (1969), The Appointment (1969), The Last Valley (1971) and The Horsemen (1971). As shabby as Columbo, but with a bit more chic, he knows he’s got to keep one step ahead of Azad, though he could indulge in a few smirks, since he’s so far ahead of the criminal, Abel won’t know what hit him when he realizes he’s been played for a dupe by Lena.
Dyan Cannon (Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice, 1969) plays her role to perfection, hints of sadness that her life is not as glamorous as she might want, possibly considering betraying her real partner, but as seductive as all-get-out. This was a bold career choice, because she had mostly been allotted wife/girlfriend parts rather than, as here, central to the machinations.
Jean-Paul Belmondo (Breathless, 1960) never appealed as much to the American audience as countryman Alain Delon, mostly because he refused to take the Hollywood coin, preferring to do his own thing in France, but he is excellent here and he would have been ideal in plenty mainstream U.S. pictures.
Hats off once again to Henri Verneuil (Guns for San Sebastian, 1968). The heist is deftly done, running a full 24 minutes, give or take a few moments for tense conversation with the nosey cop. The second unit filmed the chase, of course, but Verneuil is a master at this particular tune. He co-wrote the script with Vahe Katcha (Two Weeks in September, 1967) from the novel by David Goodis (Shoot the Piano Player, 1960). Bonus of an Ennio Morricone score.
Sizzling set pieces, cracking characters.
Fast moving n exciting. Jean Paul Belmondo n Omar Sharif impressed here. Omar Sharif’s impressive stint must also include The Night Of The Generals.
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I’d forgotten about Nigh of the Generals. Excellent in that. Generally underrated.
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Am I right in thinking that you target an American audience for your blog? You don’t tell us that this is a Franco-Italian co-production (like many in this period and going back to the late 1950s). Wikipedia suggests there are two versions one shot in French, one in English (i.e rather than one version subsequently dubbed). Did you watch the English language version? Wiki also suggests the it cost 15 million French francs (about £1.5 million) but made $33 million, mainly in Europe. I haven’t seen the film but I did see the earlier Henri Verneuil film The Sicilian Clan (1969). This certainly sounds like a heist film, but the Omar Sharif character pushes it a little towards the polar in French genre terms.
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I use American English but I don’t particularly target anybody. Last time I checked I was read in over 150 countries. I don’t bother particularly with the nuances of production unless I am doing a Behind the Scenes article. I doubt the Wiki box office. The Sicilian Clan I’ve reviewed and a couple other by Verneuil. It’s typical heist – the robbery then the follow-up/getaway/police investigation except this is all done from the corrupt angle.
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Really like this one, of a pair with Flic Money; Remy Julienne’s work is always brilliant….
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Not seen that one.
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I watched and enjoyed this film on your recommendation and enjoyed it. Then I remembered the favourable review of the film ‘Le Cerveau’ (1969), with Jean-Belmondo, in the Paris Match issue dated 29 March 1969 which I unearthed recently. According to the French J P Box-Office website ‘Le Cerveau’ was ranked no. 2 for that year with 5,547,305 admissions, coming after ‘Once Upon a Time in the West’. Expecting good entertainment I watched ‘Le Cerveau’ and found that it is outrageously daft and farcical, very much to my taste as a fan of 1960s frivolity. I was surprised that Eli Wallach could be so funny. Strangely I do not recall hearing anything about it under its English title ‘The Brain’ at the time.
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Thanks to Niven it was released in Britain, but I gave it a miss. Might take a look now. Apologies for the delayed response, I was on holiday.
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Oops, scrub the first ‘and enjoyed’ in line one.
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