The Police War
The Police War | |
---|---|
Directed by | Robin Davis |
Screenplay by | Robin Davis Jean-Patrick Manchette Jean-Marie Guillaume Jacques Labib Patrick Laurent |
Produced by | Véra Belmont |
Starring | Claude Brasseur Claude Rich Marlène Jobert |
Cinematography | Ramón F. Suárez |
Edited by | José Pinheiro |
Music by | Jean-Marie Sénia |
Production companies | Les Productions Jacques Roitfeld Stéphan Films |
Distributed by | UGC |
Release date |
|
Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Box office | $13.5 million[1] |
The Police War (French: La guerre des polices) is a French police drama film directed by Robin Davis and starring Claude Brasseur, Claude Rich and Marlène Jobert.[2] The French title (literally: "the war of the polices") refers to the rivalry between the two divisions of the French police force: the Territorial Brigade and the Anti-Gang Brigade.
Plot
[edit]The team of Commissaire Ballestrat from the Territorial Brigade stakes out the hideout of a dangerous criminal named Sarlat. Suddenly, Commissaire Fush and his team from the Anti-Gang Brigade arrive to the site. The ambitious Ballestrat would rather let Sarlat escape than allow the rival team to take credit for the arrest. In the ensuing shootout, Sarlat kills one of Fush's men and flees. From then on, the two teams treat each other with open hostility. The police chief orders Ballestrat to cooperate with the Anti-Gang team. But the two groups would still act separately in their pursuit of Sarlat. Fush becomes close with Marie, one of Ballestrat's team members. She later betrays him by informing her boss of the Anti-Gang's upcoming operation to capture Sarlat's accomplice Manekian. Ballestrat's interference causes a death of an innocent bystander. Fush submits his resignation. Then the massive police ambush against Sarlat misfires, and one of the officers is taken hostage. While the rest of the police prefer to wait the situation out, Fush single-handedly confronts Sarlat, and they are both killed in the resulting stand-off.
Cast
[edit]- Claude Brasseur : Jacques Fush
- Claude Rich : Ballestrat
- Gérard Desarthe : Hector Sarlat
- Marlène Jobert : Marie Garcin
- Jean-François Stévenin : Capati
- Georges Staquet : Millard
- Étienne Chicot : Larue
- Jean-Pierre Kalfon : Marc
- Rufus : Le Garrec
- Féodor Atkine : Serge Manékian
- François Périer : Police Chief Colombani
- Ludmila Mikaël : The Magistrate
- David Jalil : Djalloud
- Jean Rougerie : Mermoz
- Jacques Lalande : Pralin
- Roger Miremont : Lagrange
- Franck-Olivier Bonnet : René
- Albert Dray : Francis
- Jacqueline Parent
- Michel Berto
Reception
[edit]The film had 1,792,679 admissions in France and ranked 18th at the 1979 box-office.[3]
Awards
[edit]Claude Brasseur won the César Award for Best Actor at the 1980 César Awards.
References
[edit]- ^ "La Guerre des polices (1979) - JPBox-Office".
- ^ "La Guerre des polices - CF". cinema.encyclopedie.films.bifi.fr. Retrieved 2019-10-01.
- ^ "La Guerre des polices (1979) - JPBox-Office". www.jpbox-office.com. Retrieved 2019-10-01.
External links
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