The Takedown

Laurent Lafitte and Sy.
Laurent Lafitte and Sy.

By Dwight Brown, NNPA News Wire Film Critic

 (**1/2)

Biracial friend police movies (e.g., Beverly Hills Cop, Lethal Weapon) aren’t a new phenomenon and could use a refresh. The genre gets a needed update with this French ebony/ivory crime story that’s novel due its unusual antagonists. Right-wing, antiimmigrant zealots.

In this year’s French presidential election, the incumbent leader, Emmanuel Macron, a moderate, beat his far right and very xenophobic challenger Marine Le Pen. Clearly racism and the fear of foreigners weren’t winning divisive issues for her. Those social ills are also used as political tools in the U.S. But here, even the most daring filmmakers haven’t produced a crime/action/comedy that tackled the subject of ultranationalism. Not sure what’s in the Perrier they’re drinking over there but, screenwriter Stephane Kazandjian and director Louis Leterrier (Netflix’s Lupin series and the film Transporter) have either lost their minds or are extremely perceptive and progressive. Talk among yourselves.

Chief Ousmane Diakité (Omar Sy, Lupin and Intouchables) and Captain François Monge (Laurent Lafitte, Elle) have worked together on other police investigations. Their relationship is strained at best. Ousmane, an African immigrant and single dad, worked himself up the ranks, succeeded in the French Gendarmerie and now heads the Criminal Division. He’s so well respected and such a trophy that his commanders coral him into a publicity campaign to attract other people of color. François, conversely, failed a police exam three times, is the son of rich parents and he still mooches off mom and dad. His sexcapades have included his own therapist and he’s so metrosexual his socks, handkerchiefs, and underwear match. Addition-ally, Ousmane and François once dated the same woman, which makes them even more estranged.

A murder investigation leads the two out of the city into the French Alps where white racist bigots want to take their country back from the people who don’t look like them. Sound familiar? The detectives are assisted by a younger officer named Alice (Izia Higelin, Samba). The three follow a trail of clues, including a severed torso, and try to thwart other crimes against nonnationals.

The screenplay couldn’t be more topical. In fact, if Netflix streamed this French film before the country’s recent elections, it didn’t do Le Pen any favors. Especially since one of the film’s most eccentric antagonists resembles her elder self—aged but with the same snarl.

Clearly audiences will root for the good guys because solid scripts make that happen. But their enthusiasm will be boosted by Sy’s friendly and disarming demeanor. When he smiles audiences smile with him. He’s as charming as Lafitte is suitably off-putting, self-absorbed, urbane, and prissy. They’re an entertaining odd couple with a comic bromance that grows on you increasingly as they encounter danger. Their race-based conversations are often witty, funny, and relevant. Personal digs can be very pointed. The clever language, jovial banter and sensitive talk are a credit to Kazandjian’s edgy script or to the writer who translated the French dialogue into American slang.

For a movie that runs a hair under two hours, the pacing (editor Vincent Tabaillon, Taken 2 and Clash of the Titans) only lags in a few parts. The beauty of the region is well documented and action scenes are nicely captured (cinematographer Thomas Hardmeier, Yves Saint Laurent). Precincts, warehouses, and strip joints look fine (production design Françoise Dupertuis, Molière). Sy’s blue collar clothes and Lafitte’s natty attire make sense (costume designer Camille Janbon, Lupin). Add in an appropriately dramatic musical score (Guillaume Roussel, Black Beauty) and you’re pulled into the investigation for the duration.

Credit Leterrier for making what could have been a decent but immemorable action film (e.g., 355 or Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard) noteworthy. Sometimes when Ousmane and Alice mull over crime details, instead of a generic flashback, the footage depicts reenacted scenes on screen in front of the two leads. These visions could have been distractions, instead they’re fascinating. His direction also enhances Sy and Lafitte’s chemistry, making them even more appealing, annoying, combative, and amicable.

Sight gags (police officers squeezing through a tight doorway), physical humor (the morgue scene is hysterical) and adrenalin-pumping foot and car chases are all lively. Scenes with Lafitte bedding whoever he can, are amusing in a knockoff James Bond way. Sequences with all the colorful faces that have changed old France into multicultural France capture a burgeoning reality. There’s just enough here to hold viewers’ attention whether they’re in it for the excitement, laughs or social consciousness raising.

The Takedown is a follow-up to another Sy/Lafitte police film, On the Other Side of the Tracks.

So, don’t be surprised if this sequel spawns another chapter with the same team of Kazandjian, Leterrier, Sy and Lafitte. “Ebony and ivory live together in (im)perfect harmony…

 

About Carma Henry 24691 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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