The Secret (1974) Poster

(1974)

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8/10
South West France scenery
DickVG3 May 2001
The rude nature of the South West of France alongside the plot of the movie where three well known french actors give the best of themselves in a story that is taken of reality of those years of the 70's. Sublime shots and dialogues, good acting work, a movie that has no need to any Hollywood action and big budgets in order to entertain. If you like France and its mentality, then this movie is for you.
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8/10
Intelligent movie
MarioB7 October 1999
Low key but very well written drama, about a strange man (Trintignant) who is pretending to be pursued by the police and the army, because he knows a very dangerous secret. He met a couple (Jobert and always wonderful Noiret) and hide at their home. Noiret thinks that the man is very kind and decides to help him to go to Spain, where he will be safe. But the press tells that this man is a very dangerous psycho killer. The woman begins to have doubts about the man. This is a very seventies movie, with sometimes a lack of direction, but it's sure an intelligent movie. Spectators will know the famous secret at the very end of the movie. And it's a very surprising finale. By the way, whatever happen to the lovely Marlene Jobert?
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6/10
What lies beneath
dbdumonteil10 July 2007
"Le secret" was overshadowed by Robert Enrico's blockbuster "Le Vieux Fusil" released the following year.I have always thought that that movie -also featuring Noiret-was largely overrated.

"Le Secret" is a different matter:it's a return to mystery,irrational,and madness ,tendencies Enrico had displayed in his first(and best)work "Au Coeur de La Vie" (1963).It is far from being as stunning though.It's too long.In its first part,the story drags on and on.Fifteen minutes could have been easily edited out,the story would not have suffered for it.

It was the time of paranoia in political movies.In the wake of "Conversation" and "The parallax view" lots of FRench directors jumped on the bandwagon.There was Jacques Deray and "Un Papillon sur l'Epaule" ;Yves Boisset and "Espion Lève-toi" ;Jean-Claude Tramont and "Le Point de Mire" ;and Robert Enrico and "Le Secret" .All those films deal with a huge conspiracy which may or may not exist.

Enrico 's movies has good assets :his three leads are adequate ;a disturbing prologue (and a symmetrical epilogue);and characters who change : in the last third,we are not sure that Trintignant's paranoia or would be mythomania has not corrupted his "normal" companions.

The military intervention complete with paratroopers and tanks is a bit too much but it adds to the offbeat atmosphere of the film and it reminds us of Enrico's anti-militarism (already obvious in "La Belle Vie" (1964)).

"Le Secret" is a flawed but interesting work.
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Believe me deadly.
ItalianGerry5 June 2004
Warning: Spoilers
"Le Secret," a French movie directed by Robert Enrico, stars Jean Louis Trintignant as a man who has stumbled accidentally upon a state "secret." We never find out exactly what it is, but it is something so awesome and so dangerous that the government first confines him to a mental ward and then hunts him down to eliminate him once he manages to escape. There are some shades of Robert Aldrich's "Kiss Me Deadly" here.

After his escape the man is befriended by Philippe Noiret who plays a character of supernatural goodness reminiscent of his role in "The Clockmaker." Noiret and his less altruistic wife Marlène Jobert harbor and protect the man while they wonder whether he is telling them the truth or is indeed the killer which the authorities say is on the loose. Their uncertainty will cost them dearly.

The movie is weakened by our never knowing what hideous truth the man has uncovered (a sort of unexplicated Hitchcockian 'MacGuffin') and by an overly oblique directorial style from the man who gave us the unforgettable "Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge." The principals, nevertheless, are uniformly excellent, and the shock ending managed to frighten me a great deal.
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7/10
Badly Overlooked Movie
rezakazemi210 August 2022
Abolish the machine!

The classic slogan that still works.

A Deleuezian concept on machine and its surveillance emerges at final seconds. We've upgraded it to a so called matrix. This slow paced drama is about nothing and everything. Timeless and placeless story. Still works. Great performances and a heart catching score by maestro Morricone.

A melancholic journey to deep desperation.
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10/10
Infectious paranoia conspiracy.
atenxm113 August 2006
Want to see a movie that leaves you uneasy, paranoid, makes you question the reality you're presented with? Scared to go out and scared to stay in? But at all cost, distracts you from mundane reality? This is one film that does that. Forget movies that rely on lavish helpings of gore and blood, gratuitous violence, habitual screaming and endless repetition of expletives. That's not scary any more. It was only ever shocking, really, and nowadays people seem to have become used to that. No, this is a French film. No clichéd devices such as explosions of discordant noise to startle you when you least expect it. Instead, something excruciatingly sinister somehow manages to silently creep out from this film, like a miasma. A chilling, clammy, atmosphere that's reinforced by subtle but compelling acting and directing. Did you hear a noise just then . . .?

I've seen this film only a few times over the years as an adult, but I was still left disturbed by it each time. I didn't exactly 'have to leave the light on' when I went to bed afterwards. But, let's say, it left a permanent impression on me. It's the way it's executed, you see. I'm too macho to admit to anything more. For connoisseurs of effective films of this genre, this is a must for the collection. You'll end up looking over your shoulder after seeing this film. Unless, of course, they come for you too . . . .
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9/10
so beautifully simple
garywhalen218 December 2005
What a delightfully simple suspense film! From the opening scene in a "prison hospital" to a ride up an elevator to a small home in the country this Kafka-esqe story will grip you. I'm surprised this film has not been released on DVD considering it stars Jean-Louis Trintignant.

I saw this film on TV over 20 years ago. CBS offered a--sadly short-lived--cable channel that offered truly quality films. When I happened to catch Le Secret (probably 1982) I was stunned that I had never heard of it and had no memory of its release in the U.S. eight years earlier. Like Hitchock? Yes, but not completely.
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2/10
The Fugitive, under valium
vostf16 February 2013
I am amazed Le Secret only gets very good reviews here. I personally lost 94 minutes watching this, although I was already aware that Enrico was a mediocre director who happened to get fine scripts he could not really mess with.

The big failure in the secret is that it's definitely not a tense psychological thriller. Enrico has clearly no idea about how to create the appropriate atmosphere. David, the fugitive (Trintignant) doesn't really know what he wants to do, where he wants to go. That's already a bad start. Speaking of action, he happens to stay with Thomas and Julia (Noiret and Jobert): more passivity leading us further into a would-be story. To cap it all this passive fugitive with no inner will, no goal, is not presented as particularly ambiguous or manipulative. So much for the story.

Enrico doesn't direct, he just let the three leads perform their roles. Morricone's score hardly nears those de Roubaix composed for his friend Enrico, but well, this is far from an inspiring story.

Actually the opening credits sequence was very good, but right from the evasion there is simply no style or tension, nor whatever angle you are supposed to chose to tell a specific story. The last image is good too, but frankly, having some cheap political statement at the end of a bad overlong exposé is just painfully ridiculous.
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10/10
Seeking the truth beyond the boundaries of what we are
albertoveronese21 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Jean-Louis Trintignant (David) plays a fugitive on the run claiming to hold a unspeakable secret. He befriends with Marlène Jobert (Julia) and Philippe Noiret (Thomas) who are living a slightly dull life in the country. Robert Enrico's The Secret (1974) is a master peace of a film. A real film – and as an omen it reflects very well today's society; where fears and anxiety unfortunately still prevail in our lives. Leading to an increasing fatalism as events move towards a desolate conclusion, the prejudices that lie deep within yourself while watching does not let up until the very last minute… Ennio Morricone's soundtrack is incredible, one of the finest ever, tense and disarming in all the right places. An Amazing Film.
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5/10
Good cast in understandably obscure drama
gridoon202410 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Despite the presence of three French film stars (Jean Louis Trintignant, Marlène Jobert and Philippe Noiret), "The Secret" has remained mostly buried since it was made back in 1974. If you see it, you'll know why. This is not a film with much commercial appeal. Technically it is a thriller, but it has almost no thrills. The basic story is actually intriguing (what is the terrible secret that Trintignant has learned? Who are the people chasing him? Or is he just a lunatic and himself the real danger?), but it receives plodding treatment (very little happens in the first hour or so). Ennio Morricone's score is a little too epic to befit a film of this type. ** out of 4.
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9/10
A mysterious guy escapes from some underground asylum, finds refuge with a couple of fringe people of 68 and gives a new impetus to their lives.
Klaas-210 December 1999
Under mysterious circumstances a strange guy (well played by Trintignant) escapes from some underground asylum. He finds refuge with a couple of fringe people of 68 who seemed to have retired to a tranquil life somwhere in the south of France. The strange visitor revives old dreams and memories and represents new opportunities to make something more out of life. The couple, superbly played by Philippe Noiret and Marlène Jobert, have each their own reasons to be interested and intrigued by the visitor. After a series of sometimes menacing, sometimes hylarious events, always impregnated with a subdued tension, the movie ends somewhere in the emptiness of some isolated beach.

This is a very good movie. The images and the playing show a lot but also leave a lot to be guessed by the watcher. It makes a point (about Big Brother who is watching you) and is mysterious enough to remain full of tension.
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8/10
one of the composer's very best
christopher-underwood23 September 2013
Fabulous little film involving just three main characters all of whom do very well but Jean Louis Trintignant and Philippe Noiret excel. Great start, great finish and all along the way this curious film has the main protagonists and us guessing. Only Trintignant's character is really sure what is going on and we have seen him make an escape at the beginning but whether his interpretation of events is accurate is always uncertain. As well as this there is a curious relationship between the man and wife Trintignant befriends. Is he offering his wife to him, daring her, testing her?

At times quite chilling, always challenging and intriguing and if this slips or pauses for a second there is the fantastic Morricone score holding everything firmly in its grip. Sweet, menacing and assured, this has to one of the composer's very best. Great find!
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Is it really a secret ?
lionel.willoquet16 September 2001
A mysterious prisoner goes on the run, claiming to hold a State secret putting his life in dangers. An innocent couple get caught up in his flight, and the series of adventures which follows. The tension builds to a crescendo and the sense of mystery prevails throughout this paranoiac thriller, in which the reason of State takes an implacable turn.
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5/10
Secret not very diverting
info-627-66443925 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Enrico's 1974 "Le Secret" was obviously supposed to be one of those paranoid thrillers from the seventies and the marvel is at how simply it was done. In that sense you can say it was very well done. But to look at it more carefully, up against other more complex paranoid thrillers, the person who is "it"" must have a clearly, for our sake as the world/society will ultimately benefit without Intelligence making up our minds for us that an incredibly life changing "secret" can not be revealed and all who know it or possibly could stumbled upon its being able to shed light on our perspectives, other than what Intelligence wants us to be kept in the dark about, the person on the run should know where to take the secret for the best possible chances of it doing any good. In Robert Enrico's film, that avenue is not explored, and the film becomes a rather ordinary TV movie of the week with fine actors like Jean-Louis Trintignant as "David" (our agent); Marlene Jobert as "Julia" (the woman) (in a fine performance once again) and Phillip Noiret (as her husband "Thomas," friend of mankind and understanding and trusting of the agent as mankind should). Written by Robert Enrico (who previously directed the very fine "The Adventuriers" (1970)) with Pascal Jardin (dialogue) and from the novel "Le Compagnon Indesirable" by Francis Ryck, with Etienne Becker as director of photography and Ennio Morricone providing the score, the film is still rather devastating. In the day of the complex paranoid thriller, the simplicities of "Le Secret" are likely to be forgotten, and that, too, is sad.
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10/10
Well worth tracking down.
audresonmichael8 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
It's not that well known when great french films are discussed but this is a wonderful film, cunningly written and directed so that our expectations are constantly being changed. It works then as an entertainment but it has one of the greatest endings of any film. There's no way of describing it that won't spoil it. There's a time and a place for SPOILERS but there's nothing to be gained by putting them here. The end conveys love as well as anything I've ever seen. Not the joys of a quick affair but the sense that two people have been in a relationship which has matured over many years. Very special and well acted by the three leads.
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9/10
who is on the run?
dromasca3 September 2021
The presence in the cast of Jean-Louis Trintignant, Philippe Noiret and Marlene Jobert should be enough to make 'Le secret', Roberto Enrico's 1974 film a memorable one. And yet this is an almost completely forgotten film. This seems completely incomprehensible to me, especially since besides the name and the acting of the three famous actors this is a film with many qualities, a psychological thriller of the best quality reminiscent of Hitchcock's films - compact, well written, with solidly built characters that cannot be easily forgotten. In addition, it is a very actual film. If it had been made today, it would undoubtedly have been characterised as a political thriller.

This film also finds me in a very rare moment of disagreement with the opinions of my favorite film critic, Roger Ebert, who saw the film and wrote about it shortly after its release. Come on, Roger, one star out of four? Too predictable? The story of the film revolves around the mystery of the identity of David, the hero played by Trintignant, who escaped from an nightmarish institution that can be a psychiatric asylum for dangerous lunatics but can also be a prison where those who oppose the political regime are deprived of liberty and tortured or perhaps those who unintentionally found out a secret dangerous for state security are harshly interrogated to find out how much they know. Is David a dangerous psychotic killer, a paranoiac conspiracy theorist, or an innocent man trapped in a Kafkaesque situation? There is a solution to this dilemma and an explanation of the situation of the hero, which we learn practically in the last scene and the upheavals of situations and perceptions happen permanently. The relationship between the fugitive and the couple of intellectuals (he is a writer, she is an artist) could be a classic triangle consisting of an escapee and a hostage pair, but it is much more, because the characters are nuanced, the man and the woman each have their reasons for acting the way they do, and the interpretations of Philippe Noiret and Marlene Jobert are profound and create empathy. The pace at which the plot unfolds is perhaps slower than fans of action movies would expect, but there are enough moments of tension, both events-wise and psychological.

I recommend the viewing to those who have the opportunity to watch or re-watch 'Le secret'. The pleasure of seeing together the trio of formidable actors will be combined with the encounter with a well-written film, with a remarkable soundtrack signed by Ennio Morricone, which finds a perfect place among the good achievements of French cinema of the '70s.
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9/10
Faithful to the novel
searchanddestroy-18 February 2022
Robert Enrico was a damn good director, very cary concerning the adaptation from novels. Here it is question of a Francis Ryck's book, a story about people living more or less in seclusion in the deep countryside, away from the world and all its tragedies. Special atmosphere books and also characters studies. Philippe Noiret, Marlène Jobert and Jean Louis Trintignant are perfect in the roles, very close to the book characters. It is gloomy, dark, without any moral at all. It is disturbing, not for all audiences. Francis Ryck was against the government's unseen power to monitor everyone.
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9/10
Manhunt
jbgeorges31 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The secret plunges us into a terrifying manhunt and paranoid descent into hell. David, played by the excellent Jean-Louis Trintignant, escapes from a clandestine prison where he is being held for a state secret of which he accidentally became aware. In his flight he meets a couple of post sixty-eighters magnificently interpreted by the beautiful Marlène Jobert and the incomparable Philippe Noiret. Getting friends, they will try to help him in his escape ... The atmosphere is very oppressive and the doubt permanent. Like Marlène Jobert, feeling very attracted by this attractive and mysterious man but also very frightened at the idea that he could be a madman escaped from an asylum, the spectator is constantly tossed about and drawn into a headlong rush that one quickly guesses tragic... This film deals above all with "reason of state" which can be ruthless in the face of the derisory freedom of individuals, at a time when this theme was acute, in the seventies. Without knowing the exact nature of the secret and who is really hunting David, we can identify senior officials of the internal security and intelligence services. Today we would call it the deep State. This ruthless and reckless beast is skillfully opposed by Robert Enrico to the idealistic and somewhat naive world of the post-sixty-eighters, who end up crushed by the relentless machine. A wonderful and very atmospheric film that chills your spine and which is unfortunately still relevant today.
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8/10
A paranoid thriller with a threesome at the center
PimpinAinttEasy2 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Enrico switched off his tape recorder. He just stood there for a few moments. Morricone's score was devastating. The maestro had delivered all right. The title track had blown him away. It began with trickling water drops. Followed by dissonant sounds. But soon a melodious piano could be heard and it was beautiful when the violins kicked in. The director thought he could have a drink now. He could already imagine using this score in his movie. Suddenly he was excited. He could already imagine using this score at the end of the movie. But he had to make sure he wouldn't get carried away with the score. The score could take over the movie.

Enrico poured some whiskey and sat in his chair. It was a nice plot based on the Francis Ryck novel. A man escapes from a prison. He hooks up with a strange couple in rural France. He tells them that he harbors a terrible secret about the state. The couple take him in and go out of their way to save him from the authorities. Their relationship becomes complex. The man on the run is inevitably attracted to the beautiful woman who is a redhead. He develops an intense friendship with the husband. He thought about Marlene Jobert from that Godard film. She would do as the redhead. The portly Philippe Noiret as the husband who is glad to be cuckolded. Maybe Trintignant as the man on the run. There was always something very enigmatic about Trintignant. He was unforgettable in Il Sorpasso.

Both the prison the man escapes from and the house the couple occupies would look the same. Both made of stone. It would be hard to tell their interiors apart.

The film would be up to its neck in paranoia. Right from the time the man escaped. He could already imagine this terrific scene where a man runs up a flight of stairs as Trintignant takes a lift. There would be paranoia between the threesome as well. The woman would get jealous and paranoid as the husband and the man on the run grew closer.

There would also be a sepia tinged dream sequences when Trintignant remembers the time he was tortured. This would heighten the sense of paranoia. Of course, the film would not be anything like those American thrillers that expressed paranoia about their Government.

The whiskey began to hit Enrico. He wondered if the film would get noticed. Would it be remembered? 40 or 50 years from now? Would there be watchable prints of the movie? Would anyone watch it in 2016? Who knew?

(8/10)
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