Poet and pulp-fiction writer Kenneth Fearing got a lot of mileage out of THE BIG CLOCK, his sole story picked up for feature adaptation. A twisty murder story with the usual innocent man having to prove his innocence before an eye-witness works up his portrait, it starred Ray Milland & Charles Laughton. Set in a publishing house under its original title in 1948, it was later made as this French policier inside job before being relocated to the Pentagon as a military suspenser for Kevin Costner in NO WAY OUT/’87. (And more! - there’s also an unofficial ripoff with Denzel Washington, as OUT OF TIME/’03, again in a police setting.) Not a lot of surprise left in the story, generally look to your boss to find the guilty party. What does surprise is that this French version, from regular Yves Montand/Simone Signoret collaborator Alain Corneau is the stinker of the bunch. Mostly because the victim, Stefania Sandrelli’s sloe-eyed vamp, is such an insufferable tease (stalker?) on the pair of middle-aged men (Montand and François Périer) she’s targeted. One slaps her; the other brains her with an ashtray; audience cued to applaud. Ugh. Only Simone Signoret, invalid wife to Périer, has a bit of fun plotting from her bed. Are all Corneau films this dull? This one has the deadly smell of what young François Truffaut used to disdainfully dismiss as ‘Quality French Cinema.’
WATCH THIS, NOT THAT: John Farrow’s original shot at THE BIG CLOCK/’48 is an over-rated film noir, but it sure beats the other tries.









