Movie · 1981 · Comedy, Crime, Drama · 2h 8m · French
Curator score: 6.4/10 (14.9K ratings)
Overview
A pathetic police chief, humiliated by everyone around him, suddenly wants a clean slate in life, and resorts to drastic means to achieve it.
Ratings
Curator score: 6.4/10
IMDb: 7.3/10
Letterboxd: 3.67/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
TMDB: 7.0/10
Director
Bertrand Tavernier
Production
Les Films de la Tour, Little Bear, Films A2
Cast
Philippe Noiret, Isabelle Huppert, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Stéphane Audran, Eddy Mitchell, Guy Marchand, Michel Beaune, Jean Champion, Victor Garrivier, Gérard Hernandez, Daniel Langlet, Irène Skobline, Abdoulaye Diop, François Perrot, Samba Mané, Raymond Hermantier, Mamadou Dioumé, Irénée Martin, Max Ernst, Paul Grimault
Where to watch
Max
Curator Review
Verdict
A sharp, pitch-black colonial noir that turns humiliation into corrosive comedy and then into moral rot. Bertrand Tavernier’s transposition of a Jim Thompson story gives the film a nasty, ironic charge, with Philippe Noiret brilliantly balancing meekness, menace, and self-delusion.
Best for
Fans of dark crime comedies
Viewers interested in colonial-era power dynamics
People who like morally rotten antiheroes
Admirers of literary noir adaptations
Fans of bleak, satirical European cinema
Skip if
You want sympathetic characters
You dislike colonial settings or racial/power critique
You prefer straightforward thrillers over slow-burn irony
You need a clean moral center
You’re not in the mood for pitch-black humor
Overview
Coup de Torchon is one of those adaptations that feels less like a translation than a provocation. By moving Jim Thompson’s hardboiled cruelty to French West Africa, Tavernier turns a revenge story into a study of colonial cowardice, petty resentment, and the way humiliation curdles into violence. The result is funny in the most unsettling way possible, always aware of how absurd and ugly its world is.
Worth noting
Philippe Noiret is the key to the film’s uneasy power. He makes the police chief pathetic without making him simple, letting the character’s passivity, vanity, and buried rage coexist in a single performance. The film keeps finding new shades of corruption in him, and that instability is what makes it so compelling.
Bottom line
What lingers most is the atmosphere: heat, decay, boredom, and the sense of a social order already collapsing under its own hypocrisy. Tavernier stages the whole thing with a dry, unsentimental eye, so the laughs land like grimace-inducing punches. It’s a nasty little masterpiece for viewers who like their noir with a colonial wound exposed.
Top Letterboxd reviews
matt lynch (4★) · 127 likes
Relocating Thompson to pre-WWII West Africa has to be the genius move of all time, allowing this to start on the simmering resentment and eventual revenge of the oppressed/humiliated before it turns to the bogus moral certainty of a colonizer, all with a giant shit-eating grin on its face.
nick (4.5★) · 114 likes
In Coup de Torchon, American western and a colonized West Africa find their unique common ground.
Based on a American western revenge tale, Coup de Torchon replicates the same gun-wielding energy and twisted personal ordeals in a French-speaking West African small town, where overt racism and a lack of civility from his French countrymen push the main character, a seemingly meek police officer, to the absolute limit. In contrast to the cold-hearted violence depicted in the book, Coup de Torchon… more
Sam (3.5★) · 98 likes
My first Tavernier film and he’s a great director going from this film but first off I must say I’m not familiar with the original adaption which is not set in a small colonial African town and instead in the American south. I obviously can’t comment which setting is better but the colonial town makes for some great visual and storytelling the oppressive heat of the town is perfectly captured and the slow decaying nature of the outdated colonial town.… more My first Tavernier film and he’s a great director going from this film but first off I must say I’m not familiar with the original adaption which is not set in a small colonial African town and instead in the American south. I obviously can’t comment which setting is better but the colonial town makes for some great visual and storytelling the oppressive heat of the town is perfectly captured and the slow decaying nature of the outdated colonial town.… more
Justin Decloux (4★) · 80 likes
Adapting the work of Jim Thompson can be tricky because the nature of his protagonists (psychopaths/sociopaths) often make hanging around with them for an entire running time a trying affair (THE KILLER INSIDE ME). Writer/Director Bertrand Tavernier finds a solution to that issue by casting the lovable Philippe Noiret in the role of the psychopathic cop and switching the American setting to that of French West Africa. The film hits all of the same beats as the novel, but by… more Adapting the work of Jim Thompson can be tricky because the nature of his protagonists (psychopaths/sociopaths) often make hanging around with them for an entire running time a trying affair (THE KILLER INSIDE ME). Writer/Director Bertrand Tavernier finds a solution to that issue by casting the lovable Philippe Noiret in the role of the psychopathic cop and switching the American setting to that of French West Africa. The film hits all of the same beats as the novel, but by… more
Draymoney (5★) · 58 likes
Good grief -- does this hit on every single level or what? Honestly blown away by this. Knew nothing going in and this was an absolute gut-punch. Definitely just watched a movie that's going to become an all-timer for me. Can't remember the last time I saw something that made me want to seek out the book immediately. This is going to stick with me.
1998 · Crime, Drama, Thriller · 2h 1m · R · Curator 8.0/10 (147.9K ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, MGM Plus, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A study of ordinary people whose greed and fear transform a practical scheme into a moral catastrophe.