Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Un taxi pour Tobrouk (1961)

English title: Taxi for Tobruk

During World War II, four French soldiers in a jeep  get stranded in the African desert. They take a German prisoner.

Tedious war drama which reportedly was the most watched French film of its year in France. Everything in this film is predictable and clichĂ©. Also, the plot bears considerable similarity with that of the much superior Sahara (1943), a fact which seems to have gone unnoticed in reviews. For justice's sake, the fine cinematography lends the film a certain aesthetical appeal, and the actors are competent. The dialogue, credited to an experienced professional, is mostly painfully uninspired, but does include a curious speech, by a Jewish character, who was against setting the German prisoner free: "But me, I don't forget anything. I'm the nasty one, the spiteful one. I don't like being a cuckold. When I started reading Hegel, you guys were already on Mein Kampf. The French always are a book too late." I wonder whether this speech was created by the writer of the original screenplay, whose mother was Jewish, or by the dialogue man, who was an anti-semite.

Rating: 35

No comments:

Post a Comment