It lays out its noir credentials right at the start. The opening scene is not just a night scene, but it’s that film noir kind of night. You know, those nights when you know that bad stuff is going to happen.
Then we see a sinister guy in a trench-coat and he’s clearly up to no good.
We’re not surprised that there’s a murder. At least we assume it’s a murder although we don’t see exactly what happened.
We then get some grisly scenes of the body being disposed of.
It then gets even more noir, with a flashback and voiceover narration.
There’s an adulterous wife, Gloria Decrey, played by Jeanne Moreau during the film noir icon phase of her career. The cuckolded husband knows about her betrayal but his reaction is not quite what we expect. He intends to do something about it but his plan is convoluted and indirect.
There’s a blackmail angle. There’s a sleazy private detective and he’s surprised that what he’s being asked to do is not quite what he anticipated.
It becomes a war of nerves.
What a director doesn’t tell you is just as important as what he does tell you, and being told things can be just as misleading as not being told if the director knows what he’s doing. You’re going to suspect from the start that there may be a bit of misdirection going on but suspecting such a thing does not necessarily help. This movie keeps leading up to obvious plot twists and then the plot twist turns out not to be the one we expected.
We understand part of the motivations of one of the key characters but we don’t know what that person’s actual intentions are.
And there’s plenty of suspicion, guilt and emotional ambiguity.
I don’t know anything about director Édouard Molinaro but he does a confident assured job here, leading us up the garden path with considerable skill. He has a clever literate script from which to work which always helps.
I know almost nothing about Gérard Oury, whose acting career apparently petered out by the early 1960s, but he’s very good here. It’s a very noir performance as a man in control on the surface but in turmoil underneath.
This movie was in the same year that Elevator to the Gallows AKA Lift to the Scaffold (Ascenseur pour l’échafaud) made Jeanne Moreau a huge star. She’s excellent here. Gloria is not exactly a femme fatale, or at least not in a straightforward way, but she has the same kind of disastrous effect on men.
This is a nicely shot and very atmospheric movie.
Back to the Wall is genuine film noir as well as being a clever mystery suspense thriller, and it’s very highly recommended.
Kino Lorber’s Blu-Ray offers the movie in French with English subtitles. The transfer is extremely good (the movie was shot in black-and-white) and thankfully there are no extras.
I’ve also reviewed Speaking of Murder (1957) from this set. It’s not quite as good but it’s well worth a watch.
I don’t know anything about director Édouard Molinaro but he does a confident assured job here, leading us up the garden path with considerable skill. He has a clever literate script from which to work which always helps.
I know almost nothing about Gérard Oury, whose acting career apparently petered out by the early 1960s, but he’s very good here. It’s a very noir performance as a man in control on the surface but in turmoil underneath.
This movie was in the same year that Elevator to the Gallows AKA Lift to the Scaffold (Ascenseur pour l’échafaud) made Jeanne Moreau a huge star. She’s excellent here. Gloria is not exactly a femme fatale, or at least not in a straightforward way, but she has the same kind of disastrous effect on men.
This is a nicely shot and very atmospheric movie.
Back to the Wall is genuine film noir as well as being a clever mystery suspense thriller, and it’s very highly recommended.
Kino Lorber’s Blu-Ray offers the movie in French with English subtitles. The transfer is extremely good (the movie was shot in black-and-white) and thankfully there are no extras.
I’ve also reviewed Speaking of Murder (1957) from this set. It’s not quite as good but it’s well worth a watch.


































