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The Casebook of Jess Franco
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CARTAS BOCA ARRIBA
aka Attack of the Robots
(Spain/France - 1966)
Director:
Jess Franco
Screenplay: Jess Franco, Jean-Claude Carriere
Photography: Antionio Macasoli, Roger Delpuech
Music: Paul Misraki
Cast: Eddie Constantine, Francoise Brion, Sophie Hardy, Fernando
Rey, Alfredo Mayo
94 minutes |
Mario and Roderick Gauci review the Italian TV
presentation of the Spanish print, subtitled in Italian.
Enjoyable early Franco film (which I watched via a
recording off Italian TV), an espionage tale with tongue-in-cheek and
the first of Franco’s several Al Pereira adventures.
It is given an extra edge by the presence of tough-guy Eddie Constantine
who effectively parodies his image here, and seems to be having a ball
doing it! Another major asset to the film was the screenwriting credit
of Jean-Claude Carriere who contributes intermittent touches of wacky
humor, satirical barbs and wonderful dialogue – as in the scene where
the Chinese statue ‘speaks’ to Al, and he thinks he may be hearing
voices like Joan of Arc; or when his superiors showcase the various
improbably lethal devices he will have at his disposal on his mission,
and he quips that it’s evident they’ve been watching the James Bond
movies a lot lately! Robert Monell’s “Dark Waters” review captures
this essence extremely well, I think:
“ATTACK OF THE ROBOTS is a Spanish-French co-production made by the
same creative team responsible for THE DIABOLICIAL DR Z (1965). Both
movies were given a tremendous boost by the imaginative screenwriter
Jean-Claude Carriere (who had worked for the great Luis Bunuel on many
of his French productions). This perhaps explains the sarcastic
French-style humor in ATTACK OF THE ROBOTS, which differentiates this
from the more slapstick orientation of Franco's later Eurospy efforts
(such as LUCKY THE INSCRUTABLE and KISS ME MONSTER [both 1967]). For
instance, the opening assassination scenes include the murder of an
ambassador and then a high church official, scenes that are staged with
a slightly absurd, surreal touch which anticipates similiar scenes found
in future Carriere-Bunuel projects, THE MILKY WAY [1969] and THE
DISCREET CHARM OF THE BOURGEOISIE [1972].”
Unfortunately, the film loses steam around the middle where the
basically dreary (and fairly silly) plot takes center-stage. In fact,
the ‘robots’ are the film’s least successful element: amusingly
attired but also lacking a distinct air of menace; this was perhaps
intentional but I felt it weakened the suspense considerably, because in
this way Pereira was never really in any danger! Still, there are plenty
of other diversions on hand, not the least of which are the film’s two
leading ladies – Francoise Brion and Sophie Hardy – who manage quite
a nice contrast between them, apart from providing the obligatory
(albeit chaste in this case) eye-candy!
Curiously enough, the film was shot in color but released outside Spain
in black-and-white (which fact is given away by the plot-point of having
the robots change their skin color when they die, but this element
obviously does not register on-screen!). Still, as it stands, the film
elicits comparison with any number of internationally-produced film
noirs of the 50s and early 60s, and especially the work of Orson Welles
as well as Jean-Luc Godard’s almost-contemporaneous ALPHAVILLE (1965)
– no doubt Paul Misraki’s scoring credit was no mere coincidence –
which also starred Constantine as another detective, Lemmy Caution, who
was featured in a long-running series of films on the big screen.
The climax is hurried and hardly exciting (despite some lavish
interiors, the film’s production was all-too-obviously a cheapjack
affair) – but the sight of super-villain Fernando Rey (not quite in
his element here) getting his just desserts Moreau-like is reasonably
satisfactory, in my opinion. Put simply, CARTAS BOCA ARRIBA is good,
unpretentious fun most of the way and I certainly would not turn down an
opportunity to watch some of the other films Franco made featuring his
favorite detective – Al Pereira!
Review by Mario and Roderick Gauci, copyright 2004
Stills from ATTACK OF THE ROBOTS (Thanks to Mark
Barnard)


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