Lovers and Thieves (1956) Poster

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7/10
Love and Theft
MogwaiMovieReviews24 March 2018
My second Guitry, and a step down from 'La Poison', but a delightfully amoral spree nonetheless, filled with the French love of life and the French life of love.

It opens intriguingly enough, with a burglar surprising a potential suicide (the conversation which then follows between the two of them is classic Guitry) but sags a little in the middle with all the stuff in the rest home, and loses steam somewhat from then on. The courtroom scene is funny and I found myself wondering if Roberto Benigni had been influenced by the guy who wanders into the witness stand and then procedes to take over.

On the downside, the sets look cheap and ugly, more like television than film. The camerawork is for the most part flat and uninspired. Also the sound is very noticeably patchy and poor, and this doesn't seem to be because of the transfer. The ending feels like a Looney Tunes cartoon. Not sure if that's a good or bad thing.

In the end, it's a lively and enjoyable film, if one which falls some way short of a classic.
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7/10
black comedy by Sacha Guitry
myriamlenys4 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Upon entering a house, a burglar discovers a gentleman calmly sitting behind a desk. Very much to his surprise, the burglar is given a gracious and courteous welcome by his "host". The host tells the burglar that he was about to commit suicide. But first he would like to write a confession regarding an old crime...

"Assassins et voleurs" is a wicked and witty black comedy of the polished and urbane kind. The movie also uses or subverts elements from the mystery and "noir" genre. Both Jean Poiret and Michel Serrault are pretty funny. Much of the story concerning the old crime is told by way of flash-back, beginning with a chance encounter, in Deauville, between a male bather and a female swimmer of fluctuating ability. (The chance encounter leads to a sensual adulterous affair, which won't come as a great surprise to viewers familiar with French comedies.)

I enjoyed the movie, although I got the impression that the first half was far better than the second. Mind you, the final twist, at the very end, remains genius...

The "lunchtime" sequence set in the mental institution has become a classic. Also famous : Darry Cowl as a witness giving rambling evidence during the wrong trial.
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7/10
Not Guitry's Best, But Still A Lot Of Fun
boblipton1 June 2023
Thief Michel Serrault enters the apartment of Jean Poiret. Poiret is trying to kill himself, but lacks the nerve. He offers Serrault 200,000 francs to kill him, and tell him the long and winding story of how an affair with Magali Noël led him to a long career of murder and thievery.

Sacha Guitry's movie sags a bit in the middle, but soon picks up, with the writer-director's typical disdainful, amoral, cynical witticisms. If Poiret's recitation of events is not as sparkling as Guitry's would have been, but Serrault's amiable audience is continually amusing. Darryl Cowl has a fine bit as a long-winded trial witness, and Lucien Baroux is wasted as the head doctor at a loony bin Poiret attends. If it is not as consistently sparkling as many of Guitry's works, there are many sections that are a lot of fun.
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9/10
La Vie D'Un Honnête Homme.
dbdumonteil18 November 2010
Another proof positive that the French cinema was not moribund in the late fifties and that it did not need any savior ! This is the work of a young man who was 71 and who was younger than yesterday.

"Assassins Et Voleurs" is another gem from the old wave ,with an extraordinary screenplay which could be described ,for someone who do not know Sacha Guitry ,as "Billy Wilder in an insane asylum"!Yes ,it's that much good! Opening sequence :a man is sitting at his desk and you expect the director himself as it was often the case in the past;but it's not !It's Jean Poiret who teams up with his then-collaborator Michel Serrault (like Martin and Lewis, they began as a team,Poiret Et Serrault before going their own way and working both with Claude Chabrol in the eighties).But Guitry's fans know that Poiret plays Guitry himself;"Assassins Et Voleurs " is primarily a settlement of scores :Guitry had never forgotten the way he was treated in the Liberation days .What a coincidence! the scene of the trial follows the scenes in which the hero is confined to a "convalescent home" (actually an insane asylum) ,and the only witness (Darry Cowl in a five-minute tour De force) mistakes the courtroom for a stage or for ...anything but a courtroom.

The first part explodes all the clichés of the Theatre De Boulevard: a man pretends he saves a woman who pretends she's drowning;this person is a former schoolmate's wife ,the secondary school bully who treated him as his punching bag !to become his erstwhile persecutor's wife's lover,what a sweet revenge! But the two lovers do not try to hide cause fear is part of the game ,and they carry on openly in public in the cafés ,or in a department store (32 beds to make love!),or in an empty car in a railway station at night (but they are disturbed because the railroad men need to hitch the carriage up to a train leaving ).

The second part surpasses ,if it is possible the first one:a shaggy -dog story .In the mental hospital ,a guy who lost all his dough playing chess ,goes on playing with bottles,glasses and lumps of sugar as the king,the queen or the bishop;a couple,man and wife ,are both insane ;but the husband thinks he's sane and she's crazy and vice versa .We learn to steal a diamond with Plasticine (it may be of some use),without guns and violence (as Serrault tells us at the beginning:if the victims were more sensible,we wouldn't have to be brutes ,there would not be bloodshed!) My favorite scene is the housebreaking: Poiret passes himself for an engineer,coming to check the cracks in the walls (the building may fall down!).He asks the maid for help :all she 'll have to do is to probe the walls with a hammer (=Marteau in French and "Etre Marteau" = to be nuts)while he is stealing the valuables .

In his late works ,Guitry had an obsession with old age and death;here he thumbs his nose at death ,in an unexpected immoral ending (but in a world gone crazy it's difficult to tell where morality is).

I wish the New Wave had had one tenth of Guitry's wit and sense of humor !This maybe the funniest comedy of the French late fifties and a must for everyone interested in this cinema.
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9/10
"If they thought of us as skilled tradesmen,things would never turn ugly."
morrison-dylan-fan7 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
After recently watching the gripping French Film Noir Classe Tous Risques (1960-also reviewed),I was thrilled to track down a French Film Noir which sounded like a delightful genre mashup!,which led to me getting ready to meet the lovers and the thieves.

View on the film:

Diving into an off the wall flashback,the-then 71 year old writer/director Sacha Guitry displays an explosive energy that directors half his age fail to match.Keeping Artois & Cagneux seated,the screenplay by Guitry offers up an exquisite genre blend,via Artois's "one crime" pulling in grubby Film Noir double crossing,jet-set Euro fantasy,and bouncing slap-stick Comedy in an insane asylum.

Joining Artois,Guitry uses Cagneux to give the Noir a savvy heist chic,which also delivers a scorpion sting of a twist ending.Whilst looking like he is jumping into any genre that takes his fancy, Guitry superbly keeps a rich,darkly comedic Film Noir thread as the foundation of the title,as Artois (played by a wonderful Jean Poiret) and Cagneux (played by a brilliantly playful Michel Serrault) fire black Comedy one liners at everyone in their sights,as the guys are joined by cunning femme fatale Madeleine Ferrand, (played by an alluring Magali Noël) who gets Artois & Cagneux to uncover their lovers and thieves.
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