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Highway Pick-Up

Original title: Chair de poule
  • 1963
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
511
YOUR RATING
Catherine Rouvel in Highway Pick-Up (1963)
CrimeDrama

A man plans a hold-up with a group of trusted fellows, he gets his hands on the money, and the girl - what could go wrong? Almost everything.A man plans a hold-up with a group of trusted fellows, he gets his hands on the money, and the girl - what could go wrong? Almost everything.A man plans a hold-up with a group of trusted fellows, he gets his hands on the money, and the girl - what could go wrong? Almost everything.

  • Director
    • Julien Duvivier
  • Writers
    • James Hadley Chase
    • Julien Duvivier
    • René Barjavel
  • Stars
    • Robert Hossein
    • Jean Sorel
    • Catherine Rouvel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    511
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Julien Duvivier
    • Writers
      • James Hadley Chase
      • Julien Duvivier
      • René Barjavel
    • Stars
      • Robert Hossein
      • Jean Sorel
      • Catherine Rouvel
    • 12User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast16

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    Robert Hossein
    Robert Hossein
    • Daniel Boisset
    Jean Sorel
    Jean Sorel
    • Paul Genest
    Catherine Rouvel
    Catherine Rouvel
    • Maria
    Georges Wilson
    Georges Wilson
    • Thomas
    Lucien Raimbourg
    • Roux
    Nicole Berger
    Nicole Berger
    • Simone
    Jacques Bertrand
    • Marc
    Jean-Jacques Delbo
    • Joubert
    Sophie Grimaldi
    • La femme en balade
    Jean Lefebvre
    Jean Lefebvre
    • Le curé
    • (as Jean Lefevre)
    • …
    Maurice Nasil
    • L'homme en balade
    Armand Mestral
    Armand Mestral
    • Corenne
    Serge Bento
    • Un footballeur
    • (uncredited)
    Maurice Bénard
    • Petit rôle
    • (uncredited)
    Lucien Callamand
    • Le serrurier
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Dalban
    Robert Dalban
    • Le brigadier
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Julien Duvivier
    • Writers
      • James Hadley Chase
      • Julien Duvivier
      • René Barjavel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    7.2511
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    Featured reviews

    10oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

    Ultra-cynical noir

    Even though every day, you may walk past countless hordes of folk, you may even interact with a huge number of people, often-times in this era, and definitely in my time and place, and in the movie, one's psychological community, the people you have substantial interaction with, is less than a handful of people, and in the end maybe you are simply alone. I think that's brought out by the location of Chair de poule, the "relais du col", an isolated service station high in the mountains. People pass through all the time, but they're customers, cruel and spoilt (I can testify to the bad behaviour of people passing through service stations, having worked at one during my university holidays). So the horde just want things from you, but here so do your "intimate" associates. Like many french crime films of the time, Touchez pas au Grisbi (1954), being an example, or actually all of Jacques Becker's great movies, the prospect of male friendship / solidarity is tantalisingly present and seen as far more fulfilling than romantic love. It's perhaps the only escape in a cruel world. The movie's beautiful scenes are when Daniel (Robert Hossein) and Thomas (Georges Wilson) meet on the col road. A particularly wonderful and wistful tune by Georges Delerue plays here. Later, when the crapola has contacted the proverbial rotary device, a trumpeter on a passing coach-trip is there to taunt Daniel, with another wistful tune, this time mockingly so. Duvivier's is a cruel eye.

    I deliberately didn't start with the a plot outline, because it's the psychology, symbolism, and the atmosphere of the movie, rather than what's a rather generic plot that is what it's all about. The plot is, as has been pointed out, a simple noir one of ordinary people being tempted by crime, the middle section has elements of The Postman Always Rings Twice (overtly, and also covertly - there is commentary on where lust ends and love begins). Chair de poule does rise above cliché, and you can genuinely feel how stifled the two Parisian friends, Paul and Daniel are. How long can one stand in the cold? Women aren't perhaps as misogynistically portrayed as in many noir. Throughout the movie men are controllers of safes, from the initial mark, a rich man whose safe is up for robbing, and who therefore counts far more beautiful women as habitual accessories, to the proprietor of the relais du col, and Paul and Daniel, who hitherto worked in a safe-makers factory. It's a world defined by men, where every woman needs a man. Daniel's warm words about Thomas to his wife are instantly sneered at for being a, "man's opinion". Ultimately Maria (Catherine Rouvel) is a character that can be sympathised with, a character with a back story, neither an angel nor a harlot, but a woman. She is still with us and acting in movies at the time of writing! Her face at times in the movie reminded me of a cheetah's at points, she comes across as wild but snared in the world's man-trap.

    Top marks for pure villainy go to Lucien Raimbourg as Roux, who had all the shameless rapacity of that great French character from Les Misérables, Thénardier.

    Chair de poule is darkly satisfying.
    8boblipton

    Mlle Rouvel Is A Real Femme Fatale

    Robert Hossein and Jean Sorel are locksmiths who decide to rob a rich man whose safe they have recently repaired. But the man and his wife return unexpectedly and they kill the man. Sorel gets away, but Hossein is convicted of murder. Two years later, he escapes from prison and meets Georges Wilson in the Maritime Alps. Wilson takes him to his truck stop and diner where his sluttish young wife, Catherine Rouvel....

    Sounds like THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE, doesn't it? For half the movie it looks like it it. But this is from a novel by James Hadley Chase, and the director is Julien Duvivier. Duvivier's movies were one of the sources of film noir, but it's not the world that is corrupt, it's the people in the story he is telling. In the 1930s, his brand of poetical realism was tempered by having Jean Gabin in his movies,. Now, however, the principals are not doomed through the workings of fate, but by their weakness and evil. Sometimes society will exact the price. If not, then there is always the universe.
    10anne-77037

    A treasurer from French 60s

    A plot thickens in the middle of nowhere in the south of France in the 60s.

    The atmosphere is thrilling, with humorous scenes, moments of sexual tension and gangster action.

    The soundtrack is astonishing, creating a tension on the edge of your skin through exaggerated sound effects or underlining surreal situations with crazy music.

    The actors are just perfect.

    A Duvivier masterpiece worth rediscovering, notice his sense of drama staging the American night, framing these lost places: a garage-restaurant night and day, chases on a mountainside... In short, a zigzag story full of twists and turns!
    10melvelvit-1

    Evil in the sun

    Locksmith Daniel Boisett (Robert Hossein) and his co-worker Paul Genest (Jean Sorel), friends since childhood, supplement their income with the occasional burglary until life spins wildly out of control one rainy night after Paul kills a man who catches them robbing his apartment. Paul manages to escape but Daniel's wounded by police and, taking the fall alone, is later sentenced to 20 years in prison but, enroute to the big house, he escapes and hitches a ride with the middle-aged Thomas (Georges Wilson) who offers him a job at his roadside restaurant. Daniel quickly accepts but soon finds out that Thomas' sexy young wife, Maria (Catherine Rouvel), has had her eye on the nest egg in her husband's safe for a long time and could use a man like him...

    Julien Duvivier's classic French noir, based on a ripe piece of pulp fiction by James Hadley Chase ("Come Easy -Go Easy"), careens into THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE territory at this point but the story takes so many breathless twists and turns, any comparisons are ultimately unfair. All kinds of complications ensue when Maria's husband ends up dead and Paul pops up again but "no good deed goes unpunished" in this perverse universe where greed, lust, and self-preservation trump decent human emotions like love and friendship every time. Daniel's the quintessential noir anti-hero, caught in a vortex of nightmarish cause and effect, and the femme fatale's a feral sex kitten who double-crosses anyone who crosses her path. Like MGM's version of THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE, much of HIGHWAY PICKUP takes place in broad daylight, giving the film an "evil under the sun" aura and even though a stylistic shadow world, hallmark of the American Film Noir, is absent here, thematically the film's as bleak and as black as they come. The bitterly ironic ending, reminiscent of both Robert Siodmak's CRISS CROSS and Stanley Kubrick's THE KILLING, is a memorable one.
    7Red-Barracuda

    Dark and deadly games played out in the fresh mountain air

    A job goes wrong for two safe-crackers and a security guard is murdered. The thief who committed the murder escapes punishment and his partner is convicted for the crime he was responsible for. After being sentenced to twenty years, he uses his skills to escape and winds up befriending a man who owns a cafe/filling station in the mountains. When his young wife discovers the safe-cracker's past, she blackmails him into opening her husband's safe. Needless to say, the husband catches them in the act and is accidentally killed in the process. Not long after the ex-partner hooks up with his colleague on the run and the plot thickens further.

    This French crime-drama is an example of a very dark neo-noir. Every character we encounter in the cast is bad on at least some level. It's a world populated with people of different shades of dark grey, with greed and lust the main emotions of motivation. At the centre of the drama is an anti-hero who is caught in a web spun by a femme fatale, who is out to get all she can. But these are no one dimensional characters, for example the gold digging young wife acts very selfishly, yet you do sort of sympathise with her powerless position in life as a possession of her old and unattractive husband; while at the same time we understand the reasons why everyone does what they do, they all seem to be caught in traps of some kind or other. Acting is very good with Robert Hossein leading the piece and Jean Sorel his partner in crime, but perhaps it is Catherine Rouvel who is most memorable as the femme fatale whose actions propel the drama into tragedy.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The novel of James Hadley Chase which this movie is inspired from provoked the wrath of novelist James Cain, who sued Chase for copying Cain's novel : The Postman Always Rings Twice. Cain considered that the scheme in the film was more too close to his own novel.
    • Connections
      Remade as The Dumb Die Fast, the Smart Die Slow (1991)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 13, 1963 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Das Rasthaus des Teufels
    • Filming locations
      • Col de Vence, Vence, Alpes-Maritimes, France(mountain pass)
    • Production companies
      • Pans-Interopa
      • Société Nouvelle Pathé Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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