THE FRENCH HAD A NAME FOR IT
FRENCH FILM NOIR 1946-64

FRI—MON, NOV 14—17, 2014 ▪ ROXIE THEATER
Presented by Mid-Century Productions and I Wake Up Dreaming

FRIDAY, NOV 14

MANON

(1949) 6:00, 10:15

LA VERITÉ
THE TRUTH

(1960) 8:00

SATURDAY MATINEE, NOV 15

LES MAUDITS
THE DAMNED

(1947) 1:30

UNE MANCHE ET LA BELLE
A KISS FOR A KILLER

(1957)  3:30

SATURDAY NIGHT, NOV 15

TOI LE VENIN
BLONDE IN A WHITE CAR

(1958) 6:15, 9:45

UN TEMOIN DANS LA VILLE
WITNESS IN THE CITY

(1959) 8:00

SUNDAY MATINEE, NOV 16

DÉDÉE D'ANVERS

(1948) 1:30

EN CAS DE MALHEUR
LOVE IS MY PROFESSION

(1958) 3:15

SUNDAY NIGHT, NOV 16

CHAIR DE POULE
HIGHWAY PICKUP

(1963) 5:30, 9:30

VOICI LE TEMPS DES ASSASSINS
DEADLIER THAN THE MALE

(1956) 7:30

MONDAY, NOV 17

LA P... RESPECTUEUSE
THE RESPECTFUL PROSTITUTE

(1952) 6:00, 9:45

J'IRAI CRACHER SUR VOS TOMBES
I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVES

(1959) 7:45

*Note that all films will be shown with English subtitles.

SUNDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 16, 2014SALUTE TO JULIEN DUVIVIER

CHAIR DE POULE / HIGHWAY PICKUP  5:30, 9:30

Highway Pickup - Chair de poule: Jean Sorel, Catherine Rouvel, Robert Hossein

Legendary director Duvivier (PÉPÉ LE MOKO, LE FIN DU JOUR, PANIQUE) was nearing the end of his illustrious career, but he saved one of the best for last in CHAIR DE POULE, in which the essence of noir's hard-boiled school is distilled in a taut tale of fate, lust and enveloping entrapment. Robert Hossein is at his astringent best as a thief on the lam who jumps from frying pan into the fire when he holes up at a highway truck stop where he's quickly embroiled in the grasping, malevolent schemes of a hard-bitten, voluptuous vixen (Catherine Rouvel) who will literally stop at nothing to get what she wants! With Jean Sorel, and Jacques Bertand. With photography from Léonce-Henri Burel, longtime right-hand man of Robert Bresson. Dir. Julien Duvivier (1963, 107 min.).

VOICI LES TEMPS DES ASSASSINS / DEADLIER THAN THE MALE  7:30

Voici le temps des assassins - Dealier than the Male

While the other French femmes fatales are "hot," none of them approach the coiled ferocity of Danièle Delorme in DEADLIER THAN THE MALE. It's possible that no one in the history of cinema is as driven to a life of ruthless scheming by the bitter recollection of her hardscrabble youth—even Delorme herself, when interviewed, shrank from the implications within the character. American noir aficionados would do well to recall ANGEL FACE (1952) and think of Delorme's work here as "Jean Simmons on steroids."

Matching her step-for-step are Jean Gabin, the target of her desperate, malevolent scheming; Germain Kerjean as his controlling, cold-hearted mother; Gerard Blain as his clueless surrogate son; and Luciene Bogart as Delorme's decay-ridden, drug-addicted mother. Featuring superb camerawork by Armand Thiraud (Clouzot's longtime right-hand man), DEADLIER THAN THE MALE is arguably the definitive French film noir. Dir. Julien Duvivier (1956, 107 min.)

Highway Pickup - Chair de poule

Voici le temps des assassins - Dealier than the Male

THE FRENCH HAVE A NAME FOR IT continues