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Director Patrice Leconte (Monsieur Hire, The Girl on the Bridge, The Widow of St.Pierre) consistently
turns out thoughtful, character-based films. He's especially expert at the telling detail,
filling even a simple plotline, such as that of The Man on the Train, with small
observations of behavior that, together, add up to an integrated whole considerably
greater than the sum of its parts.
The man on the train seen behind the maintitles is Milan (Johnny
Hallyday), whose tired eyes sit in a face that suggests the tough guy that he is--a
veteran bank robber, arriving in a small provincial town to meet some co-conspirators and
pull off a heist. Stopping in a drug store to pick up something for a headache, he is
engaged in conversation by Monsieur Manesquier (Jean Rochefort) an elderly retired
teacher. Invited for a drink, Milan ends up staying at Manesquier's once grand, but now
shabby, family home when he discovers that the local hotel is closed.
The heist is planned for the following Saturday, the same day that
Manesquier is undergoing bypass surgery. All a bit too neat, really, but it gives
Leconte the setup he wants to explore the interaction between two utterly different people
who spend some time getting to know one another and find in each other alternatives to the
lives they have known.
Manesquier is gregarious in the manner of some people who live
alone; his talk flows freely and without inhibitions, as if it has been stored up waiting
for a listener, in contrast to the somewhat taciturn Milan. Manesquier is
self-deprecating, but in an off-handed, amused way. When Milan finds him playing Schubert
on the piano, Manesquier remarks that, aside from needlepoint, he has all the skills of a
well-bred nineteenth century French girl.
Even as Milan starts to be attracted by the comfortable, peaceful,
cultured life that Manesquier leads, Manesquier is fascinated with the pistols he
discovers amongst Milan's belongings and he asks Milan to teach him to shoot. He tries on
Milan's fringed leather jacket. He is drawn to the freedom, the adventure, the
unpredictability of Milan's life. He speaks of events as happenings which will create
memories for the future, suggesting, by implication, that his own life has been
forgettably uneventful. And he begins to make changes--a shorter haircut from the barber
who has cut his hair for decades, a frank confrontation with his sister about formerly
unspoken things.
Manesquier fantasizes about what it would be like to rob a bank and run
off to the Bahamas, but it becomes clear that he has a firm handle on the difference
between fantasy and the parameters of reality--he offers Milan money in an effort to
dissuade him from robbing the bank. Milan refuses; as intrigued as he is by Manesquier's
life, he hasn't been changed by Manesquier nearly as much as Manesquier has been changed
by him.
It's a "grass is always greener" theme, explored perceptively
and with subtlety. Leconte suggests the natural yearning for a broader experience, for
breaking out of the patterns into which a life tends to fall. And, as the two men continue
towards their destinies, he adds a layer of moral underpinning to the choices that people
make.
The role of Milan doesn't require Hallyday, primarily a pop singer, to
say much, but his craggy, almost brutish presence works perfectly as a foil for
Rochefort's star turn. Veteran Rochefort (The
Closet, Ridicule)
inhabits his role, investing Manesquier with intelligence, charm, and brittle, honest
self-awareness leavened with a sparkling sense of humor.
- Arthur Lazere