|
|
| THE LAW (LA LEGGE)
(WHERE THE HOT WIND BLOWS)
(director/writer: Jules Dassin; screenwriters: from the
novel "La Loi" by Roger Vailland/Franoise
Giroud/Diego Fabbri; cinematographer:
Otello Martelli; editors: Roger
Dwyre/Mario Serandrei; music: Roman Vlad; cast: Gina
Lollobrigida (Mariette), Pierre Brasseur (Don Cesare),
Marcello Mastroianni (Enrico Tosso, the Engineer),
Melina Mercouri (Donna Lucrezia), Yves Montand (Matteo
Brigante), Raf Mattioli (Francesco Brigante), Vittorio
Caprioli (Attilio, the Inspector), Lidia Alfonsi
(Giuseppina), Gianrico Tedeschi (First Loafer), Nino
Vingelli (Pizzaccio), Paolo Stoppa (Tonio),
Anna Arena (Anna, wife of the police inspector), Luisa
Ravelli (Elvira), Teddy Bilis (The
Judge); Runtime: 126; MPAA Rating: NR; producers:
Jacques Bar/Maleno Malenotti; Oscilloscope
Laboratories; 1959-France/Italy/USA-in French with
English subtitles) "The title, The Law, refers to a cynical power drinking game." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Expatriate
American filmmaker Jules Dassin ("Naked
City"/"Brute Force"/"Rififi") was subject to a
witch-hunt by the HUAC although he long ago quit the
Communist Party he joined in the 1930s. Nevertheless
he was blacklisted from films by Hollywood and
therefore fled in self-exile to France to pursue his
career in 1951. This randy political operatic comedy,
The Law, was based on the 1957 novel "La Loi" by
Roger Vailland and was written by Dassin. In
the end, after some hammy acting and a none too
subtle attempt to show how justice is not served
for everyone, it gets to Dassin's liberal hopes
for no more bosses. It was filmed on location in Sicily. In Europe it was released as The Law, while in America it wasn't released until after Dassin's Never on Sunday proved to be a commercial hit and it was re-titled Where The Hot Wind Blows. The title, The Law, refers to a cynical power drinking game native to southern Italy that's called “La Passatella.” The arbitrary rules are loosely kept, but the game always involves a boss and his deputy who can deny liquor to some other players until they submit to humiliating tasks. The idea is to reinforce that everyone must know their place and the boss must be respected. It's
set in the backward impoverished Mediterranean
Sicilian fishing village of Porto Monacore. A
handsome young Northern government agriculture
engineer named Enrico Tosso (Marcello
Mastroianni) has been contracted
to drain the marshes to prevent malaria. To
ensure he gets the cooperation of the
village boss, he visits the elderly
wheel-chair bound patrician landowner and
town boss Don Cesare (Pierre
Brasseur), who takes pride in his
Greek art collection, and while there
is attracted to one of the servants,
the sexy teenager Mariette (Gina
Lollobrigida), whom he
wishes to hire as a housekeeper.
The feisty Mariette refuses to be
his servant, and instead wishes
that he marry her. Mariette's
harpy mom and sisters also work
for Don
Cesare
and put the pressure on her to get
the wages and share it with them.
Instead the strong-willed Mariette
plans to get a dowry and, to get
some cash, seduces a group of
local teens to steal the police
motorcycle and then to sell it. In
a cartoonish way the lads walk
around town singing songs they
make up as events unfold. When
the local gangster, Matteo
Brigante (Yves
Montand),
connected with the lecherous
police inspector (Vittorio
Caprioli), who is
carrying on an affair with his
sister-in-law (Lidia
Alfonsi), retrieve the
stolen motorbike at its hiding
place, the feisty Mariette goes to
Plan B and steals the wallet of a
Swiss tourist who carelessly
leaves it in his coat pocket to
cover his child sleeping in the
station wagon while he attends a
local feast with his wife. The mustached
and facially scarred Matteo is
jealous of Don Cesare and unsuccessfully tries to win
over the flirty Gina and pressure his handsome
fisherman son Francesco (Raf Mattioli)
to finish law school. While the much older
Lucrezia (Melina Mercouri,
the Greek actress to be the director's wife in 1966)
pines for the 22-year-old Francesco and
feels ashamed she married for convenience the ugly
shrimp local judge (Teddy Bilis) she
never loved. It
ends by wrapping everything up in a pat way, as the
messy film seems too frivolous to be taken as a
serious work. The fun was mostly in watching Gina show
off her cleavage while she prances about in the
village. REVIEWED ON 9/18/2012 GRADE: B- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |