Directed by Jacques Becker; produced by Robert Dorfman
Max (Jean Gabin) isn’t as young as he used to be. In fact, it’s time he retired from his business. His business? Crime. And it pays. He has 50,000,000 francs in gold bars hidden away. He intends to turn it into cash, split it with his long-time partner Riton (Rene Dary), and live quietly and well. But Riton talks too much to his girlfriend, Josy (Jean Moreau), and she talks too much to her man on the side, Angelo (Lino Ventura). Now, too many people know about Max’s gold, and he could lose his retirement fund - and maybe his life.
Touchez pas au grisbi was Jean Gabin’s return to the top tier of French cinema actors after his hiatus during the Second World War (in which he served with Free French combat forces) and his subsequent dozen or so unpopular mediocre films. After this, though, there was no looking back.
The appeal of Touchez pas au grisbi grows as one progresses through the film and, indeed, with further consideration after one’s viewing. Certainly, it is Gabin who anchors the movie. His is a strong presence, and, though not always on screen, is usually felt in every scene. His character is at an age at which he is old enough for retirement, but young enough still to enjoy it. Gabin shows Max to be bored with things that others seem to think would excite him - and may once have done - such as a night-club floor-show with beautiful women. Max has settled down to one girl now, and is content with the situation.
The other actors are also very good, whether long-time veterans such as Gabin and Dary (a former child-star), or newcomers like Moreau. Ventura, the erstwhile competitive wrestler and school drop-out, is very good in this, his first acting job. His Angelo seems to have a younger version of Max’s cunning and ruthlessness, without the intelligence and sympathy.
The script makes Max’s age a convincing part of the film, with such lines as “These days, staying up past midnight is overtime”, and showing Max associating best with people his own age. The character is nicknamed Max le Menteur (“Max the Liar”), yet the term suggests ‘mentor’, which he is to younger characters. Gabin’s real-life part as a big name in French cinema of the 1930s, making a comeback in the ‘50s, appears to translate straight into the role.
The direction is interesting in that it incorporates a great deal of mundane detail without causing tedium. Some scenes show Max preparing for bed, or driving across Paris; these need not have been included but add something to the notion that he is now a more ordinary man in his tastes than he once had been. Yet, he is also the tough guy of his youth, and the climax is an exciting show-down between criminals, when slightly podgy and bespectacled men demonstrate that their vigour and violence has not entirely disappeared, and that youth should not take them for granted.
A good, solid, evocative crime-movie, Touchez pas au grisbi is a fitting introduction both to Gabin’s later work and to French films of the genre, as well as being simply an entertaining yarn.