Un homme à abattre (1967) Poster

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5/10
Unexciting and uneventful "thriller"
gridoon202417 February 2019
Every once in a while, I come across a movie that tries - sometimes successfully, sometimes not - to get away with nothing happening in it for the most part; "Un Homme à Abattre" is one such movie. About 80% of the running time concerns tracking and surveillance; now, I'm sure tracking and surveillance can be cinematic sometimes....but this is not one of those times. Valerie Lagrange is second-billed, but her part is small and useless - only there to fill the female quota. The film is not badly directed, though, so I give it ** out of 4 stars.
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6/10
Final act messed up
athadu19 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The movie is pretty good during the surveillance part. After observing their target for years, finally when they decide to kill him, they mess it up. Target comes alone unarmed and 4 of them hide in the cellar waiting for him. Result, target escapes killing/injuring 2 of them. Later, on of them says they should have attacked him instead of hiding in the cellar.
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7/10
a thriller to rediscover
dromasca14 March 2023
'Un homme a abattre' (the English distribution title is 'A Man to Kill') is an unjustly forgotten film made in 1967 that deserves to be rediscovered. Its director is Philippe Condroyer, a director who has only three feature films in his filmography. He had debuted in 1964 with an adaptation of one of the adventures of the popular cartoon character Tintin. This movie followed, and then another one in the 70s and ... that was it. The rest of his career was spent on television sets. Watching 'Un homme a abattre' I wonder why. The film has many qualities and the hand of a director who masters well his craft is evident.

The story takes place in Barcelona (the film is a Franco-Spanish co-production) before democracy and the tourist boom that turned the city into one of the chic centers of the Mediterranean. On the contrary, the city it is filmed as a rather ugly place, with deserted streets, with neighborhoods devoid of personality. The cinematography belongs to Jean Penzer, a well-known Nouvelle Vague cameraman associated with many experiments. Against this background, the violent confrontation of two groups takes place. One of them is hunting Nazi war criminals. We are only a quarter of a century after the Second World War. Their target is Schmidt, an architect suspected of being a former SS officer guilty of torture and murder during the war. He is supported by a network of ex-Nazis who are trying to escape justice in the hope that the passage of time will lead to the statute of limitations for the crimes that were committed. The four members of the team chasing Schmidt are led by Julius, the brother of one of the victims, himself a survivor. The problem is that he is not sure of Schmidt's identity and does not want to take revenge on an innocent. The surveillance is run against the clock, as the anti-Nazi team had been forced to liquidate one of the opposing gang members. When the identity of the war criminal is finally confirmed, the action - slow and building tension - accelerates.

Some details of the action are left unclear, and that's fine. We don't even know exactly who the justice seekers are. Undercover cops or law enforcement, or maybe it's a private vendetta? The Nazi gang also has its secrets, and the final scene hints that Schmidt may not be the main killer either, or at least not the only one. The most famous actor in the cast is Jean-Louis Trintignant. His character also has a romantic affair not really related to the rest of the conflict. At one point I thought that the beautiful Olga would be involved in solving the problem of Schmidt's identity. It might have been a good idea, but one that was not applied in the script written by Condroyer and his wife. But precisely the lack of biographical details of the characters strengthens the atmosphere of mystery. 'Un homme a abattre' is a thriller made in a minimalist style, which suits the story very well. The influence of Hitchcock (the one from the spy films of the 50s and 60s) is evident, especially in one of the key scenes (finely directed by the way) in which Julius searches Schmidt's apartment. I liked the film and I can only regret that Philippe Condroyer didn't have the chance to make more movies like this and we didn't get the chance to see them.
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The observation game, the Nazis, Barcelona
manuel-pestalozzi8 July 2004
Warning: Spoilers
MINOR SPOILERS This is an unique, highly interesting movie which reminds you of more famous titles like Antonioni's "Blow Up", Coppola's "The Conversation" or Polanski's "Death and the Maiden". And, believe me, it stands its ground among them. It is about a group of hired killers or foreign agents (it is never exactly explained who they are) who observe a former SS man. Their boss (or employer) is a Holocaust survivor who wants the man to be killed. But he insists he has to gain absolute certainty that the observed person really is the man who decades earlier was responsible for his suffering and the murder of members of his family. The search for this certainty, or rather his uncertainty, becomes an obsession with him, and the narrative gradually shifts from the classic action plot to an increasingly absurd and surrealistic tone. The ending is a sad, anticlimactic showdown in an alienating setting. It suits the movie very well.

Worth watching also for good location shots of Barcelona, where all the action takes place. The town was not the hip place it is known to be nowadays when the movie was made. Barcelona also has is dark past and can generate depressing moods one probably would not expect at first sight. This movie shows it plainly.
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8/10
original noir like thriller
Highly unusual and original noir like thriller directed by Philippe Condroyer and starring Jean-Louis Trintignant. For the director this would be more or less his only film, not so the young actor who even here is often acting with facial expression alone. This is a tight and compelling thriller set in late sixties Barcelona as a group of nazi chasers are trying to prove they have the right man under their surveillance. Indeed much of the first part of this film is seen in black and white as we too watch the surveillance footage as the man in their sites goes about his daily business. Much tension, much suspense and for what must have been a very low budget affair, a fascinating, realistic and involving drama. Despite the unusual concept and the effective dialogue, however, it is Trintignant who helps lift this film to what should be cult status but for some reason it remains little seen. If it had been set in Paris, perhaps instead of a drop and developing Spanish city. In any event a very worthwhile watch.
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