Thursday, September 6, 2012

The Lookout (Le Guetteur): Film Review

The Lookout - H 2012

PARIS--A high-octane sniper thriller that never quite hits its target, The Lookout (Le Guetteur) delivers bursts of gripping action alongside an otherwise heavy-handed tale of cops and robbers, with a sociopathic killer thrown into the mix.

This French-language feature from Italian actor-director Michele Placido (Crime Novel, Angel of Evil) should run up decent homeland numbers thanks to stars Daniel Auteuil and Mathieu Kassovitz, with further stints in European and Eastern territories. Although a Stateside release is unlikely, the pitch may turn a few heads in Hollywood.

Indeed, first-time screenwriters Cdric Melon and Denis Brusseaux have cooked up a fairly potent concept, evident from an opening scene that takes your typical bank heist gone wrong, and then tosses in a fresh ingredient: a tight-lipped sniper named Kaminski (Kassovitz), whos perched on a far away rooftop to shoot down the squad of arresting officers, led by the overstressed and grumbling Mattei (Auteuil).

But once that rather effective sequence runs its course, the film veers towards more predictable waters when it introduces a creepy doctor, Franck (Dardenne Bros. regular Olivier Gourmet), who is soon suspected of gruesomely murdering Kaminskis lawyer/ex-girlfriend (Arly Jover), as well as one of his partners in crime. With Mattei disappearing for much of the second act, the cat and mouse game between Franck and Kaminski takes center stage, but the serial killer plotline is way too generic (e.g. Franck acts like an introverted weirdo and listens to soothing music on a pair of vintage headphones) to sustain things until an explosive finale.

Its a pity the filmmakers didnt streamline their movie into a simple case of sniper vs. copper, because the closing sceneset in the heart of Paris in broad daylightis filled with the kind of tense and gritty action thats absent for much of the time. And while Placido has a certain talent for staging credible set pieces, the other sequences bear the routine air of a primetime policier, mixing up cheap romanticism (in the form of a kitschy Italian couple, played by Luca Argentero (Eat Pray Love) and Violante Placido (The American)) with a homogenized world of crooks, killers and drug addicts.

Kassovitz proves that he can hold his own as a downbeat action star, while Auteuil mostly phones things in (from his desk), attempting late in the game to inject some pathos into a dubious subplot involving the war in Afghanistan.

Working again with cinematographer Arlando Catinari, Placido drains much of the color out of the City of Lights, capturing the dense urban backdrop in slick, grey-toned widescreen. Nonstop score (credited to three composers) quickly grows tiresome.

Production companies: Babe Films, Climax Films, Filmarno, StudioCanal, France 2 Cinema, Appaloosa Films, Apidev 2010, Ran Entertainment, RTBF (Tlvision Belge), Rai Cinema

Cast: Daniel Auteuil, Mathieu Kassovitz, Olivier Gourmet, Francis Renaud, Nicolas Brianon, Arly Jover

Director: Michele Placido

Screenwriters: Cedric Melon, Denis Brusseaux

Producers: Fabio Conversi

Executive producer: Jean-Yves Asselin

Director of photography: Arlando Catinari

Production designer: Jean-Jacques Gernolle

Music: Nicolas Errera, Evgueni, Sacha Galperine

Costume designer: Virginie Montel

Editor: Sebastien Prangere, Consuelo Catucci

Sales: StudioCanal

No rating, 89 minutes

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