Coup de Torchon (1981) Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

Based on pulp master Jim Thompson's Pop. 1280, Bertrand Tavernier's Coup de Torchon is a sardonic thriller that remains true to its source's spirit, even as it transposes the action from the American South to colonial West Africa. Lucien (Philippe Noiret) is the bumbling police chief of Bourkasa, a dusty outpost in rural Senegal. Badgered by local thugs, Lucien initially comes across as a pathetic oaf unable to stand up for himself. Things at home are scarcely better, as Lucien finds himself harried by his nagging wife, Huguette (Stéphane Audran), who is carrying on an affair with a man she claims to be her brother (Eddy Mitchell). Without warning, Lucien embarks on a nonchalant killing spree, murdering everyone who has ever mistreated him. As he sets about "cleaning the slate," Lucien intensifies his affair with ditsy Rose (Isabelle Huppert), all the while pining for the newly arrived schoolteacher, Anne (Irene Skobline). Remaining above suspicion even as bodies pile up, the seemingly witless Lucien gradually develops a twisted logic for his actions, animating his crusade with an evangelical purpose. By movie's end, Tavernier leaves little room for redemption, leaving the joyless Lucien mired in a moral quagmire of his own making. - Elbert Ventura, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

DVD Release Date:
03/13/2001
Run Time:
128 min.
Production Co.:
Films Antenne 2, Films de la Tour, Little Bear Films, Parafrance
Director(s):
Themes:
Culture Clash, Infidelity, Colonialism, Crime Sprees, Unlikely Criminals, Police Corruption
Tone:
Humorous, Quirky, Satirical, Wry, Cynical
Keywords:
Africa, colonialism, extramarital-affair, lawman, oppression, police-chief, police-corruption, prejudice, revenge, small-town, wife
Time Period:
1938
Language:
French
Status:
DVD