A Man Escaped Movie Review
A Man Escaped Review

"A Man Escaped" Overview

Rating: NR
1956
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert BressonProducer : Alain Poiré Jean Thuillier
Screenwiter : Robert Bresson,Andre Devigny
Starring : François Leterrier
A Man Escaped succeeds simply as the most tingly, tension-filled prison escape
caper you’ll ever see, but given that the prison in question is Nazi sadist
Klaus Barbie’s holding pen for condemned French resistance fighters, the story,
which is based on true events, becomes a good vs. evil parable for the ages.
Lieutenant Fontaine (François Leterrier) is no coward. As the story begins, he’
s attempting to hurl himself from the car carrying him into the prison, which
is located in Lyon, France. But rather than simply shoot him when he succeeds
in briefly getting away, his Nazi captors pistol-whip him and deliver him to
the prison alive, where they hope to pump him for information.
Life inside quickly becomes a routine of emptying slop buckets, waiting for
hearings in front of Barbie, and listening to the frequent executions that take
place in the prison courtyard. But Fontaine isn’t discouraged. Sharp as a tack,
he begins to plan an escape immediately. Learning all he can by tapping on the
walls to communicate with his neighbors, he takes stock of the layout and
rhythms of the prison and the guards’ movements to come up with ideas. He soon
discovers that he can disassemble his cell’s wooden door, and before long he’s
taking secret nighttime strolls around the jail to learn more. At the same
time, he’s fashioning yards of handmade rope, and he even manages to make a few
grappling hooks.
Since conversation with other prisoners is forbidden, communication takes place
only by tapping and with notes slipped into pockets (until the pencil patrol
comes around and confiscates all writing implements). Fontaine meets several
interesting characters, each displaying his own level of either bravery or
resignation. Most notable is a priest, who often passes Fontaine Bible passages
to study.
What makes A Man Escaped even more compelling is the fact that much of it takes
place in silence. Fontaine provides a laconic matter-of-fact narration about
the progress of his escape plans, but most of the action is simply punctuated
by a soundtrack of Mozart music, which lends the proceedings an impressive
gravitas.
The tension really comes to a boil when Fontaine is suddenly given a cellmate,
a 15-year-old French boy who may or may not be an informant. What now? Fontaine
knows he can’t escape unless he fills the boy in on his plans, but if he does,
is he doomed? Suffice it to say the final 20 minutes of the movie are an
exquisitely crafted study of suspense.
It’s always fun to watch someone go to superhuman lengths to right a wrong.
Fontaine is as smart as MacGyver, as brave as John Wayne, and as acrobatic as
Spider-Man. He’s a mild-mannered hero for all time.
Aka Un condamné à mort s'est échappé ou Le vent souffle où il veut,, A Man
Escaped or: The Wind Bloweth Where It Listeth.
But first he was imprisoned.
Reviewer: Don Willmott



