Un crime takes place over a single night, between 10pm and 6am. It takes place in a single setting – a millionaire’s apartment in Lyon. The film is about the conflict between two men, alone, face to face in the closed world of the apartment. The first man is a famous lawyer named Dunand. The second is Frédéric Chapelin-Tourvel, Dunand’s rich client, twenty years his junior. Throughout the night, Dunand tries to track down the truth. Did Frédéric kill his father and mother, in particularly barbarous circumstances ? Probably, because he is cynical, amoral and violent. Yet probably not, because he is gentle, touching, and lives in a strange and poetic universe. Then there’s Dunand himself – is he really driven only by a quest for truth and justice ? And why does he slowly come to feel an affectionate, almost paternal feeling for Frédéric ? As dawn breaks, a long nightmare ends and Dunand discovers an unexpected, multifarious truth. Strangely, this truth binds him to Frédéric forever. –uniFrance
Jacques Deray (February 19, 1929 in Lyon – August 9, 2003 Boulogne-Billancourt) was a French film director and screenwriter. Deray is prominently known for directing many crime and thriller films
Born Jacques Desrayaud in Lyon, France in 1929 to a family of Lyons industrialists. At the age of 12 he went to Paris to study drama under René Simon. Deray played in minor roles on the stage and in films from the age of 19. From 1952, Deray worked as assistant to a number of directors, including Luis Buñuel, Gilles Grangier, Jules Dassin, and Jean Boyer.
Deray’s first film was the drama Le Gigolo released in 1960. Deray was fascinated by American film noir and began to focus on crime stories. Deray’s early work includes Du rififi à Tokyo, an homage to Jules Dassin’s Rififi. Deray’s reputation was established with the 1969 film La Piscine which starred Romy Schneider and Alain Delon. La Piscine was not distributed widely outside France, but the follow-up gave Deray his biggest… read more