Serie Noire

France, 1979

Film
Please note

Sorry, we don't have images or video for this item.

Source: Some information on this page may have been sourced as part of the 2023 Wikimedia Australia Partnership Projects grant, with the purpose of improving and expanding the use of Wikidata on our website. Wikidata is a free and open knowledge base that can be read and edited by both humans and machines. Read more about this project here.

Frank Poupart is 30 year old loser who works as a door-to-door salesman in a dreary suburban wasteland. While doing his rounds, he sells a dressing gown to an old woman. The woman says she can’t pay but offers Frank to spend time with her teenage niece as a ‘compensation’. Mona and Frank become lovers, and both of them see a way out of their impoverished dead-end existences when Mona tells him that her aunt has a large stash of money hidden away. Director Alain Corneau cited Fritz Lang and American film noir as major influences for this film. The setting of ‘Serie Noire’ is bleak and wintry: vacant lots and blocks of flats, deserted except for the central characters. Much of the film is shot in shabby interiors or in Frank’s car, itself a restricted space from which he cannot escape. The soundtrack adds to the sense of realism, comprising the rumble of thunder and traffic, and incessant pop music from the radios which are found in almost every scene. Perec [the scriptwriter] has Frank speak a mixture of French backslang (le verlan) and street slang, combined with Anglicisms and spoonerisms. As Corneau remarked: “The challenge was to give an appearance of naturalism, but at all costs to avoid succumbing to it: we had to do something totally unrealistic.” Consequently, when Frank tries to express himself, he is at odds with reality, and in his mouth even the most banal language is turned around and used obliquely. Frank’s monologues, uttered in despair or frenzy while imprisoned in his car, are his own attempt to talk himself away from ‘la zone’.” Reference: Guy Austin. ‘Contemporary French Cinema: an introduction’. Manchester University Press, 1996.

Credits: Producer, Maurice Bernart ; director, Alain Corneau ; writers, Georges Perec, Alain Corneau ; photography, Pierre-William Glenn ; music, Duke Ellington, Juan Tizol.
Cast: Patrick Dewaere, Myriam Boyer, Bernard Blier, Marie Trintignant, Andreas Katsulas, Jeanne Herviale.

Content notification

Our collection comprises over 40,000 moving image works, acquired and catalogued between the 1940s and early 2000s. As a result, some items may reflect outdated, offensive and possibly harmful views and opinions. ACMI is working to identify and redress such usages.

Learn more about our collection and our collection policy here. If you come across harmful content on our website that you would like to report, let us know.

How to watch

This work has not been digitised and is currently unavailable to view online. It may be possible for approved reseachers to view onsite at ACMI.

Learn more about accessing our collection

Collection

In ACMI's collection

Credits

director

Alain Corneau

producer

Maurice Bernart

Duration

01:55:00:00

Production places
France
Production dates
1979

Collection metadata

ACMI Identifier

X000088

Languages

English

French

Subject category

Foreign language films

Sound/audio

Sound

Colour

Colour

Holdings

16mm film; Limited Access Print (Section 2)

Wikidata

Q674267

Please note: this archive is an ongoing body of work. Sometimes the credit information (director, year etc) isn’t available so these fields may be left blank; we are progressively filling these in with further research.

Cite this work on Wikipedia

If you would like to cite this item, please use the following template: {{cite web |url=https://acmi.net.au/works/115929/ |title=Serie Noire |author=Australian Centre for the Moving Image |access-date=19 May 2024 |publisher=Australian Centre for the Moving Image}}