7/10
The road to the Riviera is paved with secrets & mysteries
8 November 2021
Some films ended up on my "must-see" list simply because they have exhilarating titles! I mean, who wouldn't want to see a movie named "Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun"? The fact it stars Oliver Reed (one of my favorite actors of all times), takes place in beautiful Southern France, and got released during the peak era of paranoid/giallo thriller gems are fantastic bonuses! I only have one slight regret, namely that I watched the film on a French television channel where it was shown in its original version, without subtitles. My French is pretty good, but the convoluted plot requires a lot of concentration and I may have missed one or two details during the fascinating climax sequence; - during the mandatory summary/explanation speech in which all the pieces of the puzzle are neatly put together.

Reed stars as a wealthy American businessman in Paris, who requests his secretary Danielle (Danni for her friends) to drive his fancy US-car back to his home after dropping him and his family off at the airport. Instead of doing this, Danni spontaneously decides to drive further South, to the Riviera, for the weekend. It doesn't turn into the careless trip she hoped for, though, as she gets attacked in a gas station, and people all along the route recognize her from recent previous encounters even though she never was there before. Or was she?

"Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun" is a compelling, albeit occasionally slow-paced, mystery with a good atmosphere, stellar performances, and a surefooted direction. My main complaint would be that the plot never reveals any clues or hints to invite the viewer to guess along about what could be the big surprise twist. I also haven't read the novel on which the film is based, so can't say if this differs in the screenplay. For fans of 70s Euro-cult, like myself, the film has a dream-cast, including the aforementioned Oliver Reed, but also Samantha Eggar ("The Brood", "Curtains") and Stéphane Audran ("Without Apparent Motive", "Spider's Labyrinth"). There's also a small role for Marcel Bozzuffi as the gas-station attendant. One year later, he would star in "The French Connection", and then continue to become a regular in Italian poliziotesschi-classics (like "Colt .38 Special Squad" and "Rome: the other Side of Violence").
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