Pasha (1968)
7/10
Un dernier p'tit trou
14 January 2022
To put it mildy ,the screenplay is trite,as old as the hills : a cop wants to do away with a mobster who reigns over the underworld and is responsible for so many deaths it's impossible to count them all.

The interest lies elsewhere ,and there is considerable appeal for fans of the French sixties::first of all Lautner's lines are a delight,one of them (about putting the stupid b.........into orbit ) has become a classic of sorts ; the cast is splendid : Gabin is true to form , André Pousse is given for once a chance to shine as the straight-face ruthless criminal who want to have his cake and eat it;Dany Carrel is simply gorgeous as the naive girl used as a lure......Not only Serge Gainsbourg wrote the soundtrack (essentially based on drums)but the viewer attends a little bit of one of his recording sessions: the best rock/pop songwriter France has ever known smokes when he's singing! Two of his songs are included : the first one ("requiem pour un c......")provides a fitting epitaph for Gabin's friend ;as it it were not enough , it's followed by the de rigueur homage by the well-meaning people who praise a man of honor, a resistant fighter , a great patriot,etc. Gabin ,although part of the establishment , mumbles words that show another side of the departed:then begins a flashback .

There's a darker side to "le pacha" ; both the superintendent ("Le Pacha" ) and his friend were about to retire and for the former it's a journey through the past,("It's a seedy part of the town" says a cop; "thank you, Gabin replies ,I was born and raised around here")
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