6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- This is as good as cop-films get, 3 May 2004
Author:
gray4 from Somerset, England
Tavernier's examination of the Paris police's losing battle against the
drug-dealers was reportedly inspired by the experience of his son's
addiction. It is an angry, despairing film. Early on the central character
says that "all drug-dealers are terrorists" and later the police chief
says
that "my son is 13. He will have already met his first dealer".
This is a documentary-style examination from the front-line, where the
police are demoralised, under-resourced, corrupt and incompetent. The
'hero', Lulu, (an outstanding performance by Didier Bezace) is a maverick
detective who gets transferred to desk duties when he is angered by his
drunken boss demanding the return of the unit's van in the middle of a
stakeout - so he can go home! After struggling with the police station's
incompetent bureaucracy, Lulu is placed in a new anti-drugs unit, led by
practical joker Dodo, concerned only with filling in forms and meeting the
Ministry's statistical targets.
The whole film rings true, right down to the tedious form-filling using
old
typewriters and stolen carbon-paper. There is no real plot, as the unit
stumbles from disaster to disaster, but rather a series of incidents
punctuated by much eating and drinking. As if to contrast with the chaos
of
the police unit, the film is shot calmly and lucidly by Tavernier. By the
end of the film you have become involved with the characters and want to
know more about their bleak futures. A wonderful film, and as good a
portrait of policing (at its worst) as you will see.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- excellent movie, 8 December 1999
Author:
mathieu.perrin from Lyons, France
The story is about policemen who work in a "commissariat" in Paris, France.
They have to do their job everyday, running after little robbers or little
drug dealers... The movie is very far from police stories we can see
everyday in others movies, with great detectives, mafias... In fact,
Bertrand Tavernier, with the help of an ancient policeman for the scenario,
tries to catch policemen every day work, with their little problems with
the
hierarchy... I think this movie is the most "real" about police problems in
France.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- personalities clash in war on drugs, 8 February 2007
Author:
mgrindberg from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
A police investigator specializes in busting as many narcotics dealers
as he can, but aside from the sad fact that drugs seem to have
permanently permeated society, his sincere efforts are often undermined
by his own department superiors. Both aspects are very well dramatized.
As well, he faces the problem in a more personal way because of his
ambiguous relationship with a heroin addict prostitute. At one point
his best street informant is exposed by one of the officers in his own
police unit, who declares that "you can always find another one".
Laying the groundwork, going from stakeout to stakeout and from slum to
slum, the film has a gritty authenticity and the main character played
by Didier Bezace makes a unique cop who actually believes in what he's
doing.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Brigade des stup', 13 October 2006
Author:
Bob Taylor (bob998@sympatico.ca) from Canada
TFO is running a series of Bertrand Tavernier's films; L. 627 is just
another example of this man's bewildering versatility--costume epics,
science fiction, exotic noir, gritty slice-of-life pictures. Here we
have police procedure with a more despairing tone than Hollywood has
ever given us. The light cynicism of the French Connection has become a
cry of despair over police corruption and bureaucratic nonsense. The
only problem: at 145 minutes, it's far too long, since there is no plot
the viewer can hang on to, just a series of vignettes.
The actors are great: Lara Guirao impresses as the HIV-positive hooker
whom Lulu is attracted to, but can't have sex with. Philippe Torreton
is his usual frightening self as Lulu's partner, while Jean-Paul Comart
is the boss from hell: irresponsible (tear gas in the coin toilet),
concerned only with filling quotas. Dodo leads the squad into a squalid
room with two African women and a baby, the resulting foul-up has to be
seen to be believed. Didier Bezace wise-cracks his way through the
chaos, showing us some of his pain.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Look After Lulu, 12 March 2006
Author:
writers_reign
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
It's unfortunate that at first glance the leading character Lulu
(Didier Bezace) looks like someone wearing a Groucho Marx mask in order
to rob a bank but once you realize that that's how Bezace actually
LOOKS you can settle down to enjoy what is essentially a lightly
fictionalized documentary chronicling the uphill struggle of a Parisian
narcotics squad who can do little more than shovel sand against the
tide. Tavernier recently spoke about the backlash against this film on
its release at a Masterclass he gave in London during which he said
that the very police who had condemned him in public later came to him
in private and told him they had been coerced by their superiors into
attacking the film whilst actually in watching it they felt as if they
had done two hours of overtime. That is, of course, a fine testimony
but it doesn't necessarily mean that the non-professional viewer will
echo it. As it happens it IS a very entertaining and involving movie
that shows just how frustrating police work can be in a modern society.
Lacking a real storyline it builds its effects by portraying the
routine, form-filling, small triumphs, large disappointments. Another
great film from a great filmmaker.
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L.627 (1992)
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

This is as good as cop-films get, 3 May 2004
Author: gray4 from Somerset, England
Tavernier's examination of the Paris police's losing battle against the drug-dealers was reportedly inspired by the experience of his son's addiction. It is an angry, despairing film. Early on the central character says that "all drug-dealers are terrorists" and later the police chief says that "my son is 13. He will have already met his first dealer".
This is a documentary-style examination from the front-line, where the police are demoralised, under-resourced, corrupt and incompetent. The 'hero', Lulu, (an outstanding performance by Didier Bezace) is a maverick detective who gets transferred to desk duties when he is angered by his drunken boss demanding the return of the unit's van in the middle of a stakeout - so he can go home! After struggling with the police station's incompetent bureaucracy, Lulu is placed in a new anti-drugs unit, led by practical joker Dodo, concerned only with filling in forms and meeting the Ministry's statistical targets.
The whole film rings true, right down to the tedious form-filling using old typewriters and stolen carbon-paper. There is no real plot, as the unit stumbles from disaster to disaster, but rather a series of incidents punctuated by much eating and drinking. As if to contrast with the chaos of the police unit, the film is shot calmly and lucidly by Tavernier. By the end of the film you have become involved with the characters and want to know more about their bleak futures. A wonderful film, and as good a portrait of policing (at its worst) as you will see.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

excellent movie, 8 December 1999
Author: mathieu.perrin from Lyons, France
The story is about policemen who work in a "commissariat" in Paris, France. They have to do their job everyday, running after little robbers or little drug dealers... The movie is very far from police stories we can see everyday in others movies, with great detectives, mafias... In fact, Bertrand Tavernier, with the help of an ancient policeman for the scenario, tries to catch policemen every day work, with their little problems with the hierarchy... I think this movie is the most "real" about police problems in France.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

personalities clash in war on drugs, 8 February 2007
Author: mgrindberg from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico
A police investigator specializes in busting as many narcotics dealers as he can, but aside from the sad fact that drugs seem to have permanently permeated society, his sincere efforts are often undermined by his own department superiors. Both aspects are very well dramatized. As well, he faces the problem in a more personal way because of his ambiguous relationship with a heroin addict prostitute. At one point his best street informant is exposed by one of the officers in his own police unit, who declares that "you can always find another one". Laying the groundwork, going from stakeout to stakeout and from slum to slum, the film has a gritty authenticity and the main character played by Didier Bezace makes a unique cop who actually believes in what he's doing.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Brigade des stup', 13 October 2006
Author: Bob Taylor (bob998@sympatico.ca) from Canada
TFO is running a series of Bertrand Tavernier's films; L. 627 is just another example of this man's bewildering versatility--costume epics, science fiction, exotic noir, gritty slice-of-life pictures. Here we have police procedure with a more despairing tone than Hollywood has ever given us. The light cynicism of the French Connection has become a cry of despair over police corruption and bureaucratic nonsense. The only problem: at 145 minutes, it's far too long, since there is no plot the viewer can hang on to, just a series of vignettes.
The actors are great: Lara Guirao impresses as the HIV-positive hooker whom Lulu is attracted to, but can't have sex with. Philippe Torreton is his usual frightening self as Lulu's partner, while Jean-Paul Comart is the boss from hell: irresponsible (tear gas in the coin toilet), concerned only with filling quotas. Dodo leads the squad into a squalid room with two African women and a baby, the resulting foul-up has to be seen to be believed. Didier Bezace wise-cracks his way through the chaos, showing us some of his pain.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Look After Lulu, 12 March 2006
Author: writers_reign
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
It's unfortunate that at first glance the leading character Lulu (Didier Bezace) looks like someone wearing a Groucho Marx mask in order to rob a bank but once you realize that that's how Bezace actually LOOKS you can settle down to enjoy what is essentially a lightly fictionalized documentary chronicling the uphill struggle of a Parisian narcotics squad who can do little more than shovel sand against the tide. Tavernier recently spoke about the backlash against this film on its release at a Masterclass he gave in London during which he said that the very police who had condemned him in public later came to him in private and told him they had been coerced by their superiors into attacking the film whilst actually in watching it they felt as if they had done two hours of overtime. That is, of course, a fine testimony but it doesn't necessarily mean that the non-professional viewer will echo it. As it happens it IS a very entertaining and involving movie that shows just how frustrating police work can be in a modern society. Lacking a real storyline it builds its effects by portraying the routine, form-filling, small triumphs, large disappointments. Another great film from a great filmmaker.
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