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The Big Risk

The Big Risk (1960)

March. 23,1960
|
7.5
|
NR
| Crime

On crowded Milan streets, two men execute a split-second payroll heist-in broad daylight-then begin a lightning-paced getaway, via every conveyance available. But after all, when a tough guy's returning to France (where he's been sentenced to death in absentia) after holing up in Italy for nearly a decade, he's got to have some startup money--particularly if he's going back with the wife and kids.

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Hottoceame
1960/03/23

The Age of Commercialism

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Smartorhypo
1960/03/24

Highly Overrated But Still Good

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Donald Seymour
1960/03/25

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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Tobias Burrows
1960/03/26

It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.

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morrison-dylan-fan
1960/03/27

Talking to a fellow IMDber about the Robert Hossein Film Noir Night Is Not For Sleep,I got given a list of French Film Noir (FFN) recs.Cutting away the FFN's I've seen,I spotted a Fabulous-looking Film Noir that Criterion has put out,which led to me deciding to risk it.The plot:Performing a successful robbery in Italy, Abel Davos and Raymond Naldi decide to escape the police by running off to France. Suspecting that he won't be coming back,Davos decides to make it a family affair,by bringing his wife Thérèse and sons Pierrot and Daniel along.Hiding on a deserted island,the group are shocked when they spot cops landing on the island.During a heavy shoot-out,the cops kill Naldi and Thérèse,just before Abel kills them.Finding himself on his own with the kids,Davos calls fellow gangsters Vintran and Fargier to help him stay undercover,which leads Vintran and Fargier contacting ambulance driver (!)Eric Stark to help with an emergency operation.View on the film:Running out of the tracks,the opening 30 minutes of co-writer/(along with José Giovanni & Pascal Jardin) director Claude Sautet's adaptation of fellow director (and ex-gangster!) Giovanni's book moves at a lightning fast speed,shooting up Film Noir loners, fiery shoot- outs,and the killing of major characters,Coming along with Stark in the ambulance,the writers display a superb eye for when to press the Film Noir gear down on Davos,which gives his touching, bitter-sweet relationship with his kids room to blossom, as the Film Noir crimes Davos committed start to circle round and close in.Going into hiding with Davos,director Claude Sautet & cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet bask in an anxiety-drenched Film Noir mood,where the raw sounds of speeding cars and gun fire keep Davos permanently on edge. Folding other gangsters into Davos tragic family drama,Sautet and Cloquet keep Davos undercover with a Film Noir elegance,with long shadows curling round each of Davos and Stark's hide-outs, until they all choke on Film Noir doom.Fighting at the side of the road,the gorgeous Sandra Milo gives a superb performance as Liliane.Dressed as a hard-edge Punk Rocker,Milo gives Liliane a warm,heart-felt mood,as Liliane gradually finds herself being on Stark's side.Entering as an outsider, Jean-Paul Belmondo gives an excellent performance as Stark,thanks to Belmondo threading Stark with an out of his depth eagerness,with rough Film Noir street fighting smarts.Trying to keep his sons away from seeing his work, Lino Ventura gives a magnificent performance as Abel Davos. Displaying a touching tenderness to the kids,Ventura crushes any aww-shucks sides from Davos with a cold- eyed Film Noir intensity,as Davos and the kids are rushed by Stark to Film Noir A & E.

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Martin Bradley
1960/03/28

Both Bresson and Melville are reputed to be big fans of "Classe Tous Risques" and it's easy to see why; either man could have directed this classic French gangster picture. The actual director was Claude Sautet and it's one of the greatest second films in movie history, (in the 15 year period between 1956 and 1970 Sautet made only 4 films). He made this one in 1960 around the time of the New Wave and while it's more traditional than something Godard or Truffaut might have done, nevertheless Sautet brings to it a freshness of approach that other gangster pictures of the period seem to lack. From the absolutely stunning opening sequence it's clear that this film will be infused with a good dose of existential angst as well as the requisite thrills that a really good gangster movie needs.Two fugitives, (Lino Ventura and Stan Krol), have decided it's time to get out of Italy and back to France as the net closes in around them but they need money. They commit a foolhardy, though daring, daylight robbery and go on the run. This opening and the chase that follows is as good as anything in crime movies. The money they make, however, is hardly enough to sustain them, (Ventura has a wife and two sons to support), so they must rely on a network of friends and criminal associates and men on the run, already operating on the very edge, need all the friends they can get, however untrustworthy they may be and these guys friends prove to be very untrustworthy indeed but when tragedy strikes Ventura seems to have no option.With the possible exceptions of Dassin's "Rififi" and several of Jean-Pierre Melville's classic gangster pictures this remains one of the greatest of genre films and is all the better for being, fundamentally, a low-key character piece. Ventura is perfect as the world-weary thief who would really rather just settle down and raise his family and he is matched by a young Jean-Paul Belmondo as the stranger who becomes his only real friend and ally. The brilliant black and white cinematography is by Ghislain Cloquet, (it was shot largely on location), and it is beautifully adapted by Sautet, Pascal Jardin and Jose Giovanni from Giovanni's novel.

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christopher-underwood
1960/03/29

Lino Ventura stars in this and although born in Italy lived most of his life in France and was a great favourite of French cinema in the 50s through to the 80s but he was no Belmondo. Often referred to as French 'noir' this is nothing of the sort, well its b/w and about gangsters but that's all. Indeed for at least the first half this movie is more related to the Italian neo-realism movement with ultra naturalistic action (and even children in tow). The film jumps into life when Belmondo appears and leaps fully into life when he starts a relationship with the lovely Sandra Milo, who is still working today. Belmondo was fresh from Breathless when he made this and for me it is those 60s moments rather than the rather dour 50s scenes that make this for me. Lots of great location shooting including Milan and Paris and decent score help this along but having been 'lost' for so long has perhaps given this a little more of a reputation than it deserves. Still, an interesting watch even if we don't care what happens to anyone, excepting the ever intriguing, Jean-Paul Belmondo.

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MisterWhiplash
1960/03/30

The film Classe tous risques directed by Claude Sautet was not a film, to be honest, I had ever really heard of until the Film Forum in NYC said that they would have a 2-week screening of the film, with new English subtitles. When I also read that it was in the vein of the classic French crime films ala Jean Pierre Melville, I jumped at the chance to check it out (at best it would rank up with his great works, and at worst I would get some good popcorn in a great theater). It was well worth the admission, as Classe tous risques is one of those kinds of French films that is just waiting to be re-discovered (or discovered for the first time). With terrific, tense diligence, Sautet keeps the suspense at a tight pitch for the first forty minutes of the film, keeping a good (if not great) middle section, and then ending it up with what is always expected with these films, but with fascinating motivations by way of the characters. With a film in the vein of this sort, you know how it will end, but it's the cool, observant journey that counts.The film features a performance with some real truth and honesty, amid the "old-school" criminal's code, by Lino Ventura as Aldo, who at the start of the film (one of the best beginnings to a film in this genre and country) steals a hefty amount of money with his partner in crime). When there is a sudden, ugly twist of fate on a beach late one night, Aldo is again on the run with two little kids. He gets the aid of Eric Stark (Jean-Paul Belmondo, a role in tune with Le Doulos only with a smidgen more humanity and charisma), who is also a thief and drives him into Paris. But there are some problems with some of Aldo's old business partner's, and one old score may be just the right ticket. A couple of times the plot may seem to be leisurely, but it isn't. Like Melville, Sautet doesn't allow any fat to his story, and it's a very tightly structured film, with some good doses of humor here and there (I was sometimes grinning at the audacity of the criminals in the beginning chase sequence, and also with a particular woman who had a finicky thing with her cat and a fish).Along with a fine score by the great George Delerue, exceptional cinematography, and a mood that is seldom met let alone matched now adays, Classe tous risques is a reminder of that bridge between the real old-school film-noir, and the latter day crime films. Gangsters in these new sort of "thug-life" movies have a 1000th of the class and honor of the thieves in this film, and is a second banana to the works of Melville and Jules Dassin (a compliment I assure you). That it has a good realistic, moral edge helps as well.

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