La traque (1975)
9/10
Hugely effective and robustly made Gallic hybrid of 'The Most Dangerous Game', seasoned with a soupcon of 'Straw Dog's!
23 January 2014
'La Traque' (1975) aka 'The Track' is a hugely effective and robustly-made Gallic hybrid of 'The Most Dangerous Game', darkly seasoned with a salacious soupcon of Peckinpah's immaculate 'Straw Dog's. The blistering and uncompromising 'La Traque' includes a bravura cast of notable French character actors, with an especially sympathetic portrayal of the desperate victim by personal favourite, Mimsy Farmer. Talented Director, Serge Leroy, keeps the swelteringly oppressive tension ratchet-tight, and unlike many other similarly lurid thrillers of that most gloriously exploitative epoch, he also pays a great deal of attention to the welcome merits of solid characterization. 'La Traque' is quite a special film indeed, and its cracking Giallo-esque score by gifted composer, Giancarlo Chiaramello should be vastly appealing to most, if not all, Euro-cult soundtrack collectors/aficionados; and one must also herald the truly brilliant, evocative, visually astute photography of one, Claude Renoir, and his canny use of hand-held cameras in the breathlessly exhilarating forest chase being particularly striking. 'La Traque' (1975) is yet another exquisite exemplar from the heady 70s that remains unjustifiably obscure today. This tremendously exciting, uncompromisingly bleak film is highly recommended, and, for me, its continued obscurity is wholly unjustified!
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