In Francois Truffaut’s Shoot the Piano Player, a 1960 example of cinema as the free exercise of imagination (complete with jokes), a man has a blighted past because of what happened to his wife and now a blighted present because of his crooked brother.
The film begins with the brother frantically running from fellow thieves until, after stumbling and falling, he is assisted by a stranger who immediately starts talking about his relationship with his wife. Incongruous, this, but true to form: Truffaut wastes no time bringing up one of his favorite subjects: women. Women mean a lot to him, in an entranced, are-women-magical? way far removed from animal sex.
Shoot the Piano Player alternates between the main character’s—Charlie Kohler’s—involvement with women and his involvement with the crooks his brother knows. The result is a personal, quite sad pulp fiction, though with a disappointing finis. (Why’d you have to knock off Marie Dubois?) Should have been more moving, for one thing.
(In French with English subtitles)
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