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Shoot the Piano Player (Tirez sur le pianiste) (1960)
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Lets just get this out of the way: the book is better. Shoot The Piano Player by David Goodis is a
poetic, bleak story about a man who hides from his shattered life by doing the only thing
he knows how to do in the most degraded circumstances possible. When his past comes for
him, he cant escape, no matter how badly he wants to, and when hes pulled in,
he drags innocents with him. Shoot The Piano Player,
by Francois Truffaut, shares these themes, but
as a French tribute to the uniquely American literary/cinematic noir genre, it makes its stylistic borrowing
apparent, sometimes to its detriment. A major characterpianist Eddies
baby brother, Fidowas not present in the book and seems to have been added to make
the plot more gripping or emotionally resonant, but this addition was a mistake. It nearly
reduces the story from a study of the damage adults wreak on themselves and those around
them, to a save-the-endangered-child melodrama.
Eddie (Charles Aznavour) is a
former classical pianist who abandoned his career after his wifes suicide. When we
meet him, hes working in a crappy Parisian dive, playing a battered upright even Tom
Waits wouldnt touch. Enter Chino, Eddies older brother and a lowlife, on the
run from two gangsters. Eddie must defend his brother, must rejoin the family he fled for
a life in the rarefied air of classical music, even as hes just stumbling into the
beginnings of the first human relationship hes had since his wifes death. His
new romance is with the bars waitress, played perfectly by the beautiful Marie
Dubois.
This is an interesting story, and
the screenplay tells it fairly well. The film goes back and forth between scenes of crime
and domesticity, and Aznavours portrayal of Eddie gives us one of the most
perfectly, terribly hollow characters ever seen on-screen. His inability to verbalize any
emotion not directly related to his own desires or ambitions is simultaneously the engine
which drives his life and the weight which inevitably crushes it. There are portions of
the film, however, which sag unforgivably, particularly when Eddie and his criminal
brothers are sitting around the table violating the cardinal rule of filmmaking:
show, dont tell. Theres way too much expository dialogue here.
Sometimes its a blessing, though, as half the film was apparently shot while the
lighting crew was on vacation: entire scenes vanish into pools of blackness, with only the
subtitles to telegraph the action. Truffaut has taken the word noir far too literally.
Shoot The Piano Player is an entertaining film,
even though its hijacking of an American crime novel for its plot demands that the viewer
accept the idea of vicious French gangsters without laughing. Its also a fascinating
study of flawed humanity. Eddie tries to break out of himself, to embrace Lena, but it
takes him so long just to get to the surface from the depths at which hes submerged
his soul that its far too late. The ending is pitch-perfect, and one shot in
particular (a body sliding across the snow) as ideal an
argument for film-as-art as anyone could ask for. But the book stakes out territory in the
readers heart that it refuses to relinquish, where the movie is, at the end of the
day, just a crime thriller. As good as this movie is (and its very good), the book
is better.
- Phil Freeman