Considering that we never
learn more about the leading character than what he does for a living,
considering that we know beforehand that the assassination attempt at the
center of the plot will not be successful, and considering that the running
time sprawls to nearly two and a half hours, it’s amazing The Day of the Jackal is so exciting to watch. Based on a novel by
Frederick Forsyth and directed with restraint and sophistication by the
venerable Fred Zinnemann, a four-time Oscar winner, the picture depicts a
fictional attempt on the life of French president Charles de Gaulle.
Circa the
early ’60s, a cabal of disenfranchised Frenchmen who are opposed to de Gualle’s
policies realize he is too heavily guarded for an outright terrorist attack to
succeed. Taking a fresh tack, the conspirators hire an English hit man known
only by his codename, “The Jackal” (Edward Fox). He takes the job for $1
million, then ensures his own security by stating that he won’t share any
information with his employers about how or when the murder will take place.
Thereafter, the picture presents, in painstaking detail, the process by which
the Jackal acquires false identification papers, special weaponry, and a
vantage point he can use as a sniper post while de Gualle attends a major
public rally.
Meanwhile, an informant in the conspirators’ organization tells
authorities an assassin has been hired, so a resourceful French detective,
Lebel (Michael Lonsdale), is assigned to prevent the killing even though the
police have no data regarding the Jackal’s identity or strategy.
Shooting at
wonderfully mundane locations throughout Europe, and almost completely
eschewing musical scoring, Zinnemman creates such palpable realism that the
movie often feels like a documentary. Whether he’s showing the Jackal coldly
practicing with his custom-made rifle or showing Lebel’s team sorting through
border-crossing records for clues, Zimmemann observes the story from a clinical
distance, allowing us to see the day-to-day procedures of two very different
worlds.
In the Jackal scenes, Fox is a seemingly emotionless operator, bringing
the same intense patience to the task of seducing an attractive woman that he
brings to the task of smuggling his gun across the French border. We catch
glimpses of his twisted humanity, as in a key moment when he ignores warning
signs telling him to abort his mission, but he remains a fascinating enigma, as
mysterious to us as he is to his pursuers. In the Lebel scenes, Lonsdale is a
wonderfully sobering presence, a relentless perfectionist who will try
anything, even bugging the offices of government officials, to advance his
investigation. (A young Derek Jacobi plays Lebel’s coolly efficient assistant.)
The story climaxes in a trite action-movie finale, but nearly every scene prior
to the ending radiates credibility and intelligence, and the tension never
lapses.
The Day of the Jackal: RIGHT ON
A major "Right On" of a movie. This film needs a
ReplyDeleteBlu-Ray release in North America.
Really, I find it hard to see the climax as a "trite action-movie finale"... Aside from the physics of,even multiple, smg rounds actually propelling someone through the air, I found the finale very restrained.
ReplyDeleteOf course Lebel was the one to pick up the weapon and kill the Jacakal, but it was quite in keeping with what preceded that he would be the one to spot the assassin at the last moment. Anyway, one round from a sniper rifle and a short, desperate burst from a sub-machine-gun is hardly overblown in an action-movie sorta way.
To my way of thinking, nothing about "trite" implies overblown. Really more a matter of the racing-the-clock shootout being unimaginative relative to the ingeniousness of the rest of the picture. Barely even a shortcoming, given how wonderful the movie is in most ways.
ReplyDeleteAhh... Well, that was me responding to the term "action-movie", more than anything else. See, I use this movie as an example of how to depict violence in a believable fashion as opposed to the typical "action-movie". The finale is brief, brutal and very, very simple.
ReplyDeleteI can watch this movie over and over again as it’s so beautifully shot in europe it’s constantly moving and the anthology of an assassin is fascinating yes it’s 1973 but look at all the great 70s European cars trains furniture and technology of the day not to mention the locations a wonderful direction from the master Zinnemann as well what’s not to like
ReplyDelete