The Passerby (1982)
7/10
The emotion has passed away ... a bit (cinémathèque)
4 November 2013
This is one movie I saw when i was a kid: maybe with parents, maybe with school, i can't say now. The only thing I remember before this projection is that's a sad story between Romy and a kid in the Nazi time. surprised to be back in the Paris of the 80s as the start of the movie as it remains a golden period for me. In France, everyone, everything seems filled with a sense of new age, new spirit, new ideas that technology today fails to bring. For those like me who interests in human rights, you can see that maybe the world has gone in a good direction as all the abuses Piccolli addresses in his speech are now closed: Ireland, Apartheid, South America, USSR.

Then, the movie goes indeed back to time and it's a bit "Schindler's list" and "Music Box" before them. Usually now, when a single mother is left with her kid, i get anxious for the family but here it wasn't really my feeling: the kid is too much in Oedipus complex and Romy is too much into her husband. Nothing really happens between them. Piccoli is as serious and rock as usual and it's a bit strange that he begins as the youngest character and ends like the oldest (as the make-up are not really good).

In my opinion, all the emotion of the movie comes from Gerard Klein, who plays the typical easy-going French: at first, he can't believe the Nazi system and finally comes to discover it. The final twist is accurate as vengeance can be a never-ending drama and it offers the opportunity to Jean Reno to claim he has played with Romy!
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