Site icon C2O library & collabtive

Ascension to the Scaffold

Louis Malle, 1958

Ciné lumière France | 1957 | B&W | 90 mins | French with English subtitles

Ascenseur Pour L’echafaud, a.k.a. Lift to the Gallows (U.S.), opens with the famous foggy close-up shot of breathy Jeanne Moreau on the phone, the smoky noir, secret passionate lovers atmosphere established from the very beginning. The diegetic sound is suddenly cut off, the camera zoomed out, and the audience hears Miles Davis’ mournful Nuit Sur Les Champs-Élysées.

Often described as the prototype of the “New Wave proper”, Malle’s debut feature — like many other French films of the 40s-50s — was adapted from a pulp-fiction crime novel (by Noel Calef of the same title). Florence (Jeanne Moreau) is in love with Julien Tavernier (Maurice Ronet), a former Vietnam and Algerian paratrooper, who now works for her husband. Together they are hatching a plot to murder her husband and to escape together. But Tavernier gets stuck inside an elevator after killing M. Carala, and Florence wanders around rain-washed Paris looking for him. Interweaved as well as running parallel to this is the story of a youthful couple, Louis and Veronique, young with a taste for melodrama and romantic adventures, their fate and crime equally doomed.

Despite a few ridiculous touches (some might argue make the best noirs), Henri Decae’s grainy cinematography, Malle’s editing, Moreau’s acting and Miles Davis’ moody scores sumptuously blend Ascension into an atmospheric thriller of murder and mistaken identities.

Related items:

Ciné lumière France | 1957 | B&W | 90 mins | French with English subtitles

Ascenseur Pour L’echafaud, a.k.a. Lift to the Gallows (U.S.), opens with the famous foggy close-up shot of breathy Jeanne Moreau on the phone, the smoky noir, secret passionate lovers atmosphere established from the very beginning. The diegetic sound is suddenly cut off, the camera zoomed out, and the audience hears Miles Davis’ mournful Nuit Sur Les Champs-Élysées.

Often described as the prototype of the “New Wave proper”, Malle’s debut feature — like many other French films of the 40s-50s — was adapted from a pulp-fiction crime novel (by Noel Calef of the same title). Florence (Jeanne Moreau) is in love with Julien Tavernier (Maurice Ronet), a former Vietnam and Algerian paratrooper, who now works for her husband. Together they are hatching a plot to murder her husband and to escape together. But Tavernier gets stuck inside an elevator after killing M. Carala, and Florence wanders around rain-washed Paris looking for him. Interweaved as well as running parallel to this is the story of a youthful couple, Louis and Veronique, young with a taste for melodrama and romantic adventures, their fate and crime equally doomed.

Despite a few ridiculous touches (some might argue make the best noirs), Henri Decae’s grainy cinematography, Malle’s editing, Moreau’s acting and Miles Davis’ moody scores sumptuously blend Ascension into an atmospheric thriller of murder and mistaken identities.

[kml_flashembed movie="http://uk.youtube.com/v/uoQVRyh5aZE" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Related items:

Exit mobile version