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Le deuxième souffle

  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
7.2K
YOUR RATING
Le deuxième souffle (1966)
CaperCrimeDrama

A gangster escapes jail and quickly makes plans to continue his criminal ways elsewhere, but a determined inspector is closing in.A gangster escapes jail and quickly makes plans to continue his criminal ways elsewhere, but a determined inspector is closing in.A gangster escapes jail and quickly makes plans to continue his criminal ways elsewhere, but a determined inspector is closing in.

  • Director
    • Jean-Pierre Melville
  • Writers
    • José Giovanni
    • Jean-Pierre Melville
  • Stars
    • Lino Ventura
    • Paul Meurisse
    • Raymond Pellegrin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    7.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean-Pierre Melville
    • Writers
      • José Giovanni
      • Jean-Pierre Melville
    • Stars
      • Lino Ventura
      • Paul Meurisse
      • Raymond Pellegrin
    • 32User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos93

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Lino Ventura
    Lino Ventura
    • Gustave 'Gu' Minda
    Paul Meurisse
    Paul Meurisse
    • Commissaire Blot
    Raymond Pellegrin
    Raymond Pellegrin
    • Paul Ricci
    Christine Fabréga
    Christine Fabréga
    • Simone - dite 'Manouche'
    • (as Christine Fabrega)
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    • Jo Ricci
    • (as Marcel Bozzufi)
    Paul Frankeur
    Paul Frankeur
    • Inspector Fardiano
    Denis Manuel
    Denis Manuel
    • Antoine Ripa
    Jean Négroni
    • L'homme
    • (as Jean Negroni)
    Michel Constantin
    Michel Constantin
    • Alban
    Pierre Zimmer
    Pierre Zimmer
    • Orloff
    Pierre Grasset
    Pierre Grasset
    • Pascal Léonetti
    Jacques Léonard
    • Henri Tourneur
    • (as Jack Leonard)
    Raymond Loyer
    • Jacques, le notaire
    Régis Outin
      Albert Michel
      • Marcel le Stéphanois
      Jean-Claude Bercq
      Jean-Claude Bercq
      • Inspecteur Godefroy
      Louis Bugette
      Louis Bugette
      • Théo, le passeur
      Albert Dagnant
      • Jeannot Franchi
      • Director
        • Jean-Pierre Melville
      • Writers
        • José Giovanni
        • Jean-Pierre Melville
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews32

      7.97.2K
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      Featured reviews

      9AlsExGal

      One of the finest heist films I've seen...

      ... from France and French director Jean-Pierre Melville

      An aging criminal, Gustave "Gu" Minde, breaks out of prison after having been there for ten years and is therefore being searched for by the police. He wanted to hide out in another country, but has insufficient funds to do so. He signs on to one last caper so he can retire - the heist of 800 million francs worth of platinum from an armored car. This will require the killing of the two motorcycle cops accompanying the armored car, and the killing of one of them is Gu's part in the crime. He doesn't like the idea of doing this, but ultimately looks upon it as just business, not personal - like he's firing some long time employee because of business conditions. Gu's attempt at staying free is complicated by Commissaire Blot, who is hot on his trail. Complications ensue.

      This film at over 150 minutes in length did not drag at all, even though the heist doesn't occur until about 90 minutes into the film, because the characters are fascinating, even though there is a dearth of dialogue, maybe BECAUSE there is a dearth of dialogue. What these characters do speaks for themselves.

      Gu is very interesting - A real antihero. We learn he has killed before the events in this film, and as I mentioned before he is not a psychopath who enjoys killing but does it when he considers it necessary. But what really bothers him is if his reputation for never talking to the authorities and giving up associates is impugned. For that reputation he will do most anything to restore his "honor", and that leads to the interesting conclusion.

      The little things are very important in this film - the shot of the ants at work on the ground as the robbers wait for the armored car to appear on the desolate road, and a scene of Gu enjoying a good meal after having been in prison for so long.

      I'd recommend this one. It was one of the most interesting heist films I've seen made in any nation. Kudos to Eddie Muller for showing this on Turner Classic Movie's Noir Alley.
      8Ore-Sama

      Breath taking

      What I find is that a great film of great length, whether slow paced or not, is life a sheep in wolf's clothing. However intimidating a run time may look, the greats go by quicker than many 90 minute efforts. Whether it's Solaris(1972) and Andrei Rubev(1966) in just short o9f 3 hours, or Seven Samurai(1954) and Godfather II(1974) in excess of 200 minutes, there films to me never feel their length and always justify it. While many have commented on "Second Wind" (using the English title for simplicity's sake) running time, rest assured, it too is deceptive.

      The film opens abruptly into the finale of an escape sequence from prison, giving no breathing room as you are thrown into the action. One man dies but the other two make it out, as we go to an atmospheric opening credits sequence of the two running through the forest, with little to no music. Only one of the escapees is of concern to us, Gustave Minda (regularly called Gu), put behind bars for a train robbery gone wrong. He comes back to his old stomping grounds, rescuing his sister and loyal friend from a pair of thugs. Their murder further brings heat down on him in a case led by Blot, a wise cracking but crafty inspector. Many plot points are running intersect, including a battle over the cigarette business and the forming of a heist, the latter of which Gu is drawn into in order to have some money when he leaves the country. While there are a lot of characters and going ons to keep track of, as long as one is paying attention, following along is simple, as Melville masterfully brings these plot points together.

      This is a dialogue and character heavy movie, making it more similar to "Bob the Gambler" (1955) than "Le Samurai(1967). While maybe not as snappy as Godard, or Tarantino for a more modern example, Melville's films were always strong in dialogue, and this is no exception. This movie is composed of a string of home running scenes. Whether it's humorous, like inspector Blot's sarcastic rant on the unwillingness of a restaurant's employees and customers to comment on the shooting that had occurred, or serious, such as a trio of gangsters confronting a man they believe set them up, there are no wasted scenes or dull moments, whether five minutes or twenty. There's nothing here story wise that is of particularly new ground: a noir style fatalism, a police force as corrupt as the criminals they pursue, political intrigue and betrayals, however it doesn't matter. Originality is welcome but not necessary in anything, and here we see these familiar threads executed with such enthusiasm, backed by strong performances all around, that it hardly matters whether one has seen these things before. If there is one possibly original aspect, it is in it's ending which I won't spoil here. It's a small, but important moment, and much like his follow up "Le Samurai"(1967), widely open to interpretation.

      Melville is known for his awesome visuals and mood, and this is no exception. His love of noir is apparent in the perfectly dark lighting, combined with an often minimal soundtrack that aids in creating a mood of dread in many scenes. This is actually a much more subdued effort for Melville in that regard, but it works here as the focus is much more on story and characters.

      Not to be missed for fans of crime films.
      9larrywest42-610-618957

      A realistic quasi-noir crime drama

      I don't speak French, but the acting and the subtitled dialog are outstanding throughout.

      The plot and each situation, each conversation, is completely credible, and follows naturally, yet not predictably, from what came before.

      A note to younger audiences: there are no highly choreographed fight scenes or stylized gun battles (though there are fights and shooting). No throw-away romantic interest. No noticeable special effects. No wisecracking. No mood music telling you what to feel.

      So, if you're used to recent Hollywood fare, it may seem slow.

      But, to this noir-lover, it feels fresh, yet as gritty as a run-down apartment in a hundred year-old building.
      8jzappa

      An Exercise In Style That Transcends That Status

      Why do I always care about thieves in heist films, no matter how bad they are? As is common in Jean-Pierre Melville's later films, this meticulously crafted crime film opens with a title card that epigrammatically sets out a foreboding epigram that molds ostensible meaning into the action: "A man is given but one right at birth: to choose his own death. But if he chooses because he's weary of his own life, then his entire existence has been without meaning." It's invariably inhibiting to totally apply these fatalistic, existential aphorisms to the films that thus proceed, but they tend to cast a distinct outlook across the film. I'm not so sure that this slow, deliberate caper, or any of Melville's others for that matter, seeks all of the indications of this quote, but its pretext of fate, mortality and grim, solipsistic judgment corresponds with the essential themes of the film.

      Like Le Cercle Rouge, Le Deuxième Soufflé is a nominal saga, an antithetical and composite film in which the life seems as if to impose and simultaneously exhale. Ventura's performance is both innate and disciplined by his claustrophobic settings. There are several instances set within moving cars, less to expand the atmosphere than to show the inhibition of the space they employ.

      What frustrates and somewhat detaches me however is that Melville never seems to give his characters any involved cognitive measure. They're characterized and assessed by the black and white of their behavior. Gu is a ruthless, intractable and curtailed presence who gains recognition, even from Inspector Blot, another wonderfully named character, played by Paul Meurisse, who respects his deadly actions because he eventually complies with and doesn't veer from his dang "code."

      Much of this 1966 cops-and-robbers film can be explained just in terms of its distilled preoccupation with the reference to the conventions regarding the treatment of Chandler, McBain, W.R. Burnett, Jim Thompson, stylish Hollywood crime dramas, and classic American gangster pictures. Melville's films in this mode have the element of photogenics, conformity to modern ideas and models nourished by a shadowy nonchalance and the characters' affectedly memorialized mannerisms. For instance when a dutiful thug prepares to meet the other gang members, casing the place first, but also anticipating the blanket preconditions of the scene. This dogmatic behavior underscores the salutary definitions of these characters, their movements having a textbook role. You can also see Melville's influence on Tarantino's Jackie Brown when the thug is dramatically pre-performing the differing poses of the impending standoff. Also, it's not until Gu changes into clothing more mindfully echoing that of a gangster that he is allowed to free himself from being so secretive and concealed.

      The sullen, inflamed and exceedingly conventionalized quality of this typified film conveys Melville's immersion in the downbeat deliberation of the play of loyalty and destined disloyalty. With this transcendent crime film, as per Melville's usual, complete with another great title, Second Wind, Melville pushes the tonal qualities and gray scale of the image to new levels. The movie's preoccupation with issues of fellowship, abnormally all-consuming professionalism, silence, and duplicity reverberates with Melville's own distinction as an egocentric, tight-lipped, fringe-dwelling figure in French cinema, who despite his success never truly declared participation or involvement in any founded generation or evolution of filmmakers.
      8Naoufel_Boucetta

      Melville doesn't run out of breath.

      Melville's 'Le deuxième souffle' as many of his other works, reflects the same particular and distinctive style of Melville. The film proposes more or less all Melville's usual themes (relations and tensions between cops and thugs, violence, loyalty, forbidden love and friendship). Melville managed the film admirably with coherent storytelling, masterful directing, slow but infinitely good rhythm and especially his intriguing characters, portrayed by a fantastic cast. An excellent dramatic crime film that marks Jean-pierre Melville's iconic era.

      A great watch.

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      Related interests

      Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Don Cheadle, Matt Damon, and Elliott Gould in Ocean's Eleven (2001)
      Caper
      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
      Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
      Drama

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        During the shooting of the scene in which Lino Ventura runs after the freight train that he tries to jump in, director Jean-Pierre Melville asked the train conductor to speed the train up, making it more difficult for Ventura to successfully make the jump, and Melville wanted to see the pain on his face as he tried harder to catch the train. When Ventura heard about this, long after the shooting, he was so angry about it that he had a huge row with Melville. The two never spoke again. They did make another film together, Army of Shadows (1969), but only spoke to each other through assistants.
      • Goofs
        In the very beginning of the movie, when Gu jumps over the prison wall, it shakes to the weight of his body, revealing it is probably made of wood or some other lighter material, and not concrete as it is made to appear.
      • Quotes

        Paul Ricci: You want to start the New Year with 200 million?

        Orloff: One can start the New Year lots of ways... or not start at all.

      • Connections
        Referenced in A Cop (1972)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • November 1, 1966 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • France
      • Language
        • French
      • Also known as
        • Second Wind
      • Filming locations
        • Cap Canaille, Cassis, Bouches-du-Rhône, France(robbery)
      • Production company
        • Les Productions Montaigne
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Gross worldwide
        • $16,310
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 2h 30m(150 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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