Categories
Morricone

The Morricone Collection: “Le Professionnel” (1981)

Film poster
The most famous track from the album, Chi Mai, also featured on Morricone’s Magdalena score.

From Wikipedia:

Gatefold

Chi Mai” (Italian: whoever) is a composition by Ennio Morriconewritten in 1971. It was first used in the film Maddalena (1971), later in the films Le Professionnel directed by Georges Lautner (1981),[1] as well as in the television series An Englishman’s Castle (1978). In 1981, it was used as the theme music for the BBC series The Life and Times of David Lloyd George[2] and the BBC release of the theme reached number 2 on the UK Singles Chart.[3]

Face A
Face B
Reverse album cover

The Film:

Film trailer
French DVD menu

From Wikipedia:

“The Professional (original title: Le Professionnel; French pronunciation: [lə pʁɔfɛsjɔˈnɛl]) is a 1981 French action thriller film directed by Georges Lautner. The film stars Jean-Paul Belmondo as the title role. The film is based on the award-winning 1976 novel Death of a Thin-Skinned Animalby Patrick Alexander.

The film was a commercial success upon its theatrical release and was the fourth most watched feature film in France in 1981 behind La ChèvreRaiders of the Lost Ark and The Fox and the Hound, selling 5,243,559 tickets.[7]

The music was composed by Ennio Morricone, and the main theme “Chi Mai” became an instrumental hit and subsequent classic.

Jean-Paul Belmondo initially planned to work on Barracuda, directed by Yves Boisset, a film partly inspired by the Françoise Claustre hostage affair in Chadfrom 1974 to 1977. However, differences arose due to what Boisset described as “incompatible conditions regarding the project”. Boisset wanted to include references to the Claustre affair, while Belmondo preferred it to be an adventure film.[8] Alexandre Mnouchkine, Belmondo’s producer, was not interested in Barracuda and suggested adapting Death of a Thin-Skinned Animal by British author Patrick Alexander, published in 1978 in the Série noire collection.[9][8]

When Boisset declined, Belmondo, impressed by the book, decided to proceed with the film adaptation. Georges Lautner, available at the time, was chosen as the director, marking his third collaboration with Belmondo after Flic ou voyou(1978) and Le Guignolo (1979).[8]Michel Audiard was tasked with adapting the novel and writing the screenplay. The story, originally set in England, was relocated to France to suit the production. However, the first draft, which retained some of the novel’s dialogues, did not impress Lautner, Belmondo, or Mnouchkine.[8][9]Audiard was reportedly more focused on writing Garde à vue, leading to the involvement of Francis Veber as a script doctor to refine the screenplay.[10][11]Audiard’s lack of interest led to his son, Jacques Audiard, being credited for the screenplay.[9]

DVD cover art

The film’s title change was influenced by Belmondo and his publicist René Chateau, despite initial resistance from Mnouchkine, Lautner, and Audiard.[9]

The story and political context of Le Professionnel were inspired by France’s complex diplomatic relations with its former African colonies during the Françafriqueera under Jacques Foccart.[9]

Filming

With a budget of 20 million francs, Le Professionnel was filmed from 5 May to 13 July 1981.[12] The African prison scenes were shot in the Camargue, with Montpellieruniversity students hired as extras.[8] Georges Lautner noted logistical challenges, including the need to shoot the opening scene with a telephoto lens due to issues with the set.

Subsequent scenes were filmed in Paris, including the car chase between Beaumont and Rosen, choreographed by Rémy Julienneand shot near the Trocadéro.[8]Paul Belmondo, Jean-Paul’s father, helped secure filming permissions. Interior scenes were shot at the Studios d’Épinay.[8]

The climactic scenes were filmed at the Château de Maintenon and the Résidence Salmson Le Point du Jour in Boulogne-Billancourt, accompanied by Ennio Morricone’s score. The final sequence, which deviated from the producers’ original vision, was retained due to Belmondo and Lautner’s insistence.

Cast

The cast of Le Professionnel includes Robert Hossein as Commissioner Rosen and Cyrielle Clair. Belmondo suggested Hossein to ensure a formidable on-screen rivalry.[8] Other cast members include Jean DesaillyÉlisabeth MargoniBernard-Pierre Donnadieu, and Belmondo’s longtime collaborators Michel Beaune and Pierre Vernier.

Lobby cards

Popularity in Eastern Europe:

Because of the film’s subject matter and the improving relations between France and the Communist Bloc at the time, the film had received a limited release in the Soviet Union and several other Soviet-aligned states like Poland, and received immense popularity, having become a household name there.

https://youtu.be/8BJfUrczM6c?si=S3cWVJ7sEzHBPfo1
Film clip
Categories
Morricone

The Morricone Collection: “Il Serpente” (1973)

Theatrical poster.

Having previously written the scores for the Henri Vernueil-directed pictures “Guns For San Sebastián,” The Sicilian Clan,” and “Le Casse” (aka “The Burglars“), Ennio Morricone was once again enlisted by Verneuil, this time to compose the score for his new spy thriller, “Le Serpent.”

Album cover art (earlier pressing).

Side A of Morricone’s score for “Il Serpente” starts off weary and mournful, with a theme that would not be out of place in a romantic drama (at that inevitable point when the lovers part). As sad and wistful as things begin, they quickly turn jazzy and psychedelic, with grungy guitars, propulsive drums, and wailing electric keyboards. Then the Maestro slows things down again with strings, piano, and flute, another melancholy theme, veering on romantic. Heavy organs follow, furthering the “funeral music” vibe. A slower variation on the opening theme ends on a bittersweet note, before a traditional- sounding military march caps off the first half of the record.

Album cover art (earlier French pressing).

Side B kicks off with high tension from a string arrangement that recalls some of Morricone’s giallo scores. Strange percussive sounds add to the uneasy feeling that might have the listener on edge as the strings become jagged razors.

Album cover art (Dagored pressing).

With the next track, Morricoene blurs the line between score and sound design, providing more mood and atmosphere than melody and rhythm.

Album cover art (Japanese pressing).

Taut, disorienting, and anxiety-inducing for the remainder of Side B, “Il Serpente” is not one of the Maestro’s most melodic compositions, but it very effectively creates the suspense and tension an international spy thriller requires.

CD album art.

Morricone would also go on to write the scores for Verneuil’sPeur Sur La Ville” (aka “Fear Over The City“), starring JeanPaul Belmondo (in one of his best action-star performances), and “I… For Icarus,” starring Yves Montand.

Album cover art.
Album cover art.

With an impressive international cast of headliners (Henry Fonda, Yul Brynner, Dirk Bogard, Philip Noiret, and Virna Lisi), “Le Serpent” (aka “Night Flight From Moscow“) tells the story of a Soviet diplomat (Brynner) plotting his defection to America by trading a list of alleged Soviet double agents. As Brynner is taken into Fonda’s custody in the US, the names on his list begin getting knocked off, one by one.

Henry Fonda has his eye on the slippery Yul Brynner.
Yul Brynner as soviet spy, Col. Alexei Vlassov.
Le serpent (movie, 1973)
Lobby card featuring Fonda and Brynner.
Lobby card featuring Fonda.
Alternate poster art.
The Serpent (1973) - IMDb
Alternate poster.
8 photos d'exploitation du film LE SERPENT (1973)
More lobby cards.
Italian poster.
Serpiente (1973)
Japanese poster.

Links:

Listen to Morricone’s score for “Il Serpente” here:

Il Serpente” score on YouTube.

Watch the trailer for “Le Serpent” here:

Le Serpent” aka “Night Flight From Moscow” trailer on YouTube.

Watch the complete film for free here:

Full film on YouTube.

If you are in the Toronto area, say hi to my Filmography co-host Bjorn, and find “Le Serpent” (as “Night Flight From Moscow“) at Bay Street Video here:

http://www.baystreetvideo.com/title.php?page=1&title=Night+Flight+From+Moscow

Outside of the Toronto area, purchase the DVD on Amazon here:

https://a.co/d/8ffunGN