Last Known Address (1970) Poster

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8/10
Endearing movie.
dbdumonteil8 April 2005
This might be my Jose Giovanni favorite.His third movie,it is perhaps his most endearing one.A really unusual thriller,which uses urban landscapes with great skill.We often seem to be lost in an ocean of windows ,which makes sense,because the plot is actually a search.

Two cops,a man and a woman, (Ventura and Jobert)are looking for a witness for the prosecution .That man seems to have disappeared.So their investigation looks like a treasure hunt.They meet a lot of people,some of whom have known the mysterious guy.They learn that he is a widower living with his daughter.The girl herself is an enigma,being described as a fairy tale princess by some (Paul Crauchet) or a vicious Lolita (the woman with the cat).The woman cop even dreams of them,and that sequence is really excellent,as they seem more and more to be a mirage.

There is something of John Huston in the conclusion of "dernier domicile connu" (last known address).It deals with cowardice ,sadness and despair,one of the harshest endings Giovanni ever filmed.Even if they succeeded in their mission,the two cops realize that they have been manipulated and that they have completely destroyed two human beings' happiness.

Marlène Jobert has perhaps never been better than here.Once a enthusiastic rookie ,her despair is intense when the movie ends.Ventura portrays a fallen cop from the beginning: He was relegated to a local police station after having arrested a drunken rich kid.Disillusioned ,but still believing in what he's doing,he will become a broken man as the last lines read:life is lost when you did not live your life as you would have liked to.

Good directing,fine acting,and as usual ,wonderful score by François de Roubaix.
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7/10
Exceptionally realistic and cold Noir film in which Lino Ventura as stubborn Police Inspector is awesome .
ma-cortes11 November 2015
Classic French Polar film with two greatest stars of the seventies : homely , craggy-looking mug Lino Ventura and attractive Marlene Jovert . Rude police inspector Léonetti (brutish, burly-framed presence Lino Ventura) , a two-fisted , violent cop detains a son of powerful lawyer and this one seeks vengeance . As soon as chief inspector to be aware , Leonetti has been sent to a suburban district after being reprimanded . Leonetti is angry to be moved a second-rate police station but he is assigned to form a peculiar team . There he meets young and beautiful Jeanne Dumas (Marlene Jovert) who is given as his colleague . Both of whom join forces to catch small-time delinquents . Later on , the duo formed by the efficient policeman and the rookie cop are soon assigned a very difficult assignment : to find a missing witness whose evidence is instrumental in convicting a killer called Soramon (Heron) . They start searching throughout Paris , asking neighbours , finding several tracks and red herrings . Meanwhile , they are pursued by a mysterious gangster called Greg (Michael Constantin) .

This is a suspense ¨Polar¨ or French Noir film in which intrigue and thriller is continuous . From the beginning to the end it turns out to suspenseful , including well developing of interesting characters , and for that reason is entertaining . The movie has great loads of emotion , dark-edged drama , tension and intriguing events . Exciting and thought-provoking screenplay by the same Jose Giovanni , based on the novel titled ¨Dernier Domicile Connu¨ written by Joseph Harrington . Studio-character about unsettling characters damned to inevitable tragedies , powerful finale , stylized set pieces heightens the suspense and tension have place in all Jose Giovanni's film-making . One of his favourite actors was Lino Ventura , whom Jose directed many times . Actors' interpretation is excellent , as Lino Ventura , as Marlene Jobert . Ventura as a serious as well as tough cop with dark past is magnificent . Lino was a big French star and ex-boxer , looking for gangster types for his next film , director Jacques Becker gave the inexperienced 34-year-old his first acting job as bad guy support to star Jean Gabin in the crime thriller ¨Hand off the loot¨ (1954) . Lino went on to appear with Gabin in several of the star's subsequent movies , often playing a gangster , including "Crime and Punishment" , ¨Speaking of Murder¨ and ¨Maigret¨. Lino came into his own as a tough-nut character star in the 1960s playing both sides of the moral fence , as policeman or mobster . Lino appeared in scores of films now considered classic French cinema . His peculiar aspect took the form of various criminals types as in ¨Second Breath¨ (1966) and ¨Happy New Year¨ (1973) as well as dogged , good-guy inspectors in ¨The incorruptible¨ (1975) or ¨The French Detective¨ , ¨Illustrious Corpses¨ (1976), and ¨The Grilling¨ . He played other unforgettable films , such as ¨The Three penny Opera¨ , ¨Modigliani¨, ¨The adventurers¨ , The slap¨, ¨Jailbird's vacation¨ , ¨The army of shadows¨ , ¨Witness in the City¨ and ¨Joe Valachi's papers¨ . Support cast is pretty good , as Paul Crauchet , Michael Constantine and uncredited Serge Marquand .

Evocative and atmospheric cinematography by Etienne Becker is simply riveting . Special mention for musical score by François De Roubaix , it's sensitive and agreeable , including a feeling leitmotif . The motion picture was well produced by Jacques Bar and compellingly written/directed by Jose Giovanni , making a memorable work , though sometimes results to be slow-moving . Giovanni participated in the French Resistance during World War II . Worked as a lumberjack , diver , mountain guide and coal miner . Jose wrote 20 novels, 2 memories' books , 33 scripts , and directed 15 movies and 5 TV movies . His novel, "Le Trou," ("The hole", slang for prison) , which became a classic film , was based on his own escape attempt from a Paris prison . Director Jacques Becker bought the rights of the book and directed it in 1959 , considered to be the best prison movie . That's how José Giovanni entered the cinema world . He became a well-known dialoguist , scenarist too, working many times with Jacques Becker . Then he directed his first movie in 1966 , "La Loi Des Survivants" , while he was still writing novels about gangsters , cops , prison and manly friendship . He was a purveyor of a certain kind of noir movie , creating his own company and a tiny studio . Some of his films , many are based from his own novels , include Le Rapace (1968), La Scoumoune (1972) , The gypsy (1975) , Boomerang (1976) , and Le Ruffian (1983). Giovanni directed some great French actors as Alain Delon , Jean Gabin , Jean-Paul Belmondo , and , of course , Lino Ventura .
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8/10
faultlessly put together and never lets up
christopher-underwood20 October 2013
Very good, solid French thriller from Director, Jose Giovanni, who also wrote the script. Police are supposed to be searching for key witness in an important trial and give the task to an out of favour cop, known for a tendency to get the job done by whatever means. The marvellous, Lino Ventura is that cop and almost as an aside he's given a rookie assistant played by Marlene Jobert. It is an early film for her but she had already been in Louis Malle's, Thief of Paris and Godard's, Masculin Feminin! Both are great in this and just as well because they are the film as we follow them around the outskirts of Paris, following clue by clue. Much of the film is clearly shot in the streets and is really well done. Being French there is always time to stop off in a cafe or bistro and these slower scenes are also very well done. This doesn't sound particularly thrilling but it is faultlessly put together and never lets up as we race from corner to corner of those charming Parisian streets.
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6/10
Lino Ventura and Marlène Jobert are the whole show...
GodeonWay15 March 2018
In a nutshell, I'd call this police drama 'pretty good'. But not nearly as excellent as some reviewers have made it out to be. On the plus side are the standout performances of tough cop Lino Ventura and his rookie assistant, the enchanting Marlène Jobert.

In the early 1970s Jobert was probably France's most in-demand actress, so lovely and so endearing that it was hard not to fall in love with her. I succombed immediately on seeing her irresistible performance in René Clément's classic Rider on the Rain, where she is perfectly paired with the redoubtable Charles Bronson.

Also on the plus side are many gorgeous glimpses of Paris, by day and by night. On the minus side though, is the contrived drama of the movie. Like many French police films of the period, it tries too hard to be more than a police story. It strives to be a meaningful essay on modern society, morality and lost illusions.

Still, it's pretty good, and if you're a fan of directors like Sidney Lumet, Arthur Penn and Elia Kazan, you'll probably find a great deal to like in Dernier domicile connu.

But if your taste runs more toward Alfred Hitchcock and Fritz Lang, you can skip this one and go directly to Rider on the Rain.
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7/10
Witness for the prosecution
jotix1004 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
"Dernier domicile connu" was shown the other day on a French cable channel. This was the third film of Jose Giovanni, a man who wrote extensively for the French cinema and went on to direct his own material. Mr. Giovanni's forte was the "policier" in which he excelled with the themes he decided to tackle, as he proves here.

This film shows a felicitous casting with Lino Ventura and Marlene Jobert in the principal roles. Both actors show an easy chemistry between them as two police following the trail of a man wanted to testify in a judicial process. To make things different the two cops decide to concentrate in the daughter of the man being sought. The pivotal witness is not their key interest, knowing that of they find the little girl, she will lead them to the father, while at the same time, opposing criminals try to outsmart the policemen.

Mr. Giovanni, who based his screenplay on a Joseph Harrington novel of the same title, takes the viewer all over the Paris of those years, taking the viewer all over the city, setting the story in out of the way places many visitors never get to see. The best thing in the film is a young, and fresh, Marlene Jobert, perfect as the rookie detective. Lino Ventura is effective as the tough as nails cop working against the clock to get to the witness.
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7/10
Very good police procedural and nice modern noir
vostf5 October 2012
Lino Ventura is simply perfect as this noir hero, too professional to rebel against the absurdity of his job. But why would they have him wear a small hat? The big broad-shouldered, former pro wrestler, Lino Ventura in brown-over-black 1970 style (remember Shaft?), OK, but who wears a hat in 1970? It makes him look like Inspector Clouseau. In the book Francis X. Kerrigan wears a dust jacket, OK this is the overused private coat, but keep it simple, in tune and in genre.

Fortunately the story is good, it's a sharp and clean police procedural and it shows that José Giovanni loved it. He loved that it displayed a stubborn officer walking his beat in the midst of general hostility against police. It was really fashionable to criticise the police around 1969 and Giovanni is happy to drive the point home more than once, most prominently in Paul Crauchet's monologue, but generally in the absurdity of Lino Ventura's assignments. Subtlety is definitely not Giovanni's forte but here it blends well with the simple police procedural.

All in all this could have been a tremendous modern noir with a better director (Melville, Sautet). The result doesn't show important directorial choices. Camera work and editing are average, and sound editing is poor while François de Roubaix's score would have been sufficient to carry most of the images. In the end you will feel as if the movie simply vanishes from your memory while you were really rooting for Ventura and Joubert minutes before.
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9/10
Beautiful and well paced
almontin22 July 2010
First of all, this is the first time I have watched a Lino Venture movie, so seeing it with new eyes has perhaps conferred it a special shine. But it is truly a very beautiful movie shot in a 1960s Paris in which only the cars have changed over the years. But the beauty also applies to the cast of actors and to their sensitive acting.

Lino Ventura is the fallen cop who doesn't bare a grudge and is dedicated as ever to his job, landing him into a painful fist fight with some thugs, and dealing chivalrously with his bright-eyed assistant Marlène Jobert who truly delivers as a newcomer to the job of crime fighting, aptly portraying both excitement and disillusion. The supporting cast, good and evil, deliver very well and accurately depict Paris' diversity (often through gritty character depictions and photography) 40 years back.

The plot flows well, sometimes interspersed with dream sequences which are beautifully rendered. Never cheesy (like so many movies of the time), well paced and acted, truly a great cop movie which has aged very gracefully.
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Good french thriller/action film
Paulo-2513 October 1999
An undercover policeman goes trough Paris to find a man whose testimony is the pivotal point to convict a murderer. Good action film, with very good use of editing and music to create tension, however the acting and plot seem to make it a middle ground affair.
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7/10
French Justice System
claudio_carvalho21 September 2023
In Paris, the police inspector Marceau Leonetti (Lino Ventura) is a decorated and efficient police officer. When he arrests the son of a powerful lawyer, who was drunken and driving in a reckless way, his father destroys his professional life and Leonetti falls in disgrace. He is transferred to a minor police station to work with the gorgeous Jeanne Dumas (Marlène Jobert) arresting perverts in movie theaters. Out of the blue, Leonetti is invited to find the mysterious Roger Martin (Philippe March), who is the witness of a murder of a man by a powerful mobster and has gone missing five years ago. Now Leonetti and Jeanne have five days to find the unknown man.

"Dernier domicile connu" (1970), a.k.a. "Last Known Address" is a great police story that shows how the French police and justice worked in the 70's. Lino Ventura performs a tough and efficient police inspector aware of the system and the lovely Marlène Jobert, the mother of Eva Green, performs a sensitive woman that deeply feels how the system works. The conclusion with the fate of Roger Martin is realistic but disappoints. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Último Domicílio Conhecido" ("Last Known Address")
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10/10
Address book.
morrison-dylan-fan3 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
After recently re-watching auteur director Julien Duvivier excellent Film Noir Chair De Poule (1963-also reviewed),I decided to look around for other French Film Noir titles scattered around my bedroom.

Being close to giving up on finding a movie that I would match my liking,I was delighted to stumble upon a wonderful sounding mystery French Film Noir,which led to me getting ready to track down the last known address.

View on the film:

Filmed on the outskirts miles away from any tourist spots,writer/directing auteur José Giovanni (aka: Joseph Damiani-who almost went to the gallows,and supported the Nazis in their occupation of France!) & cinematographer Étienne Becker give Paris a raw, drenched-out appearance ,which along with tapping into the Film Noir atmosphere,also gives the title strong Neo-Realist notes,thanks to Giovanni peeling the grime off the streets of Paris across the screen.

Backed by an ultra-smooth score from François de Roubaix,Giovanni allows moments of dazzling style to rise from the murky streets,with expertly handled whip-pans being use to show Leonetti & Dumas circling in on Martin.

Adapting Joseph Harrington's novel,Giovanni displays a precise skill in transferring the story from dirty cop shenanigans to deeply cynical Film Noir,with Giovanni keeping the investigation moving at a surprisingly quick-draw pace,as Leonetti gradually begins to suspect that using his fists should not be the first option he takes in solving a crime.

Whilst he delivers a message on the failure to protect witnesses in an explicit manner,Giovanni unexpectedly allows a subtle warmth to develop between Leonetti and Dumas,that is kept away from any ill-fitting romantic notes,by Giovanni instead showing both of them gain respect for the others investigation skills.

Although she is now perhaps best known for being Eva Green's mum, Marlène Jobert gives an excellent performance as Jeanne Dumas that combines Dumas tomboy-like nature with a genuine,sweet sincerity to "Do the right thing."

Kicking the movie off by punching any thug that gets in his way, Lino Ventura gives a marvelous,tough Noir performance as Leonetti,with Ventura covering Leonetti's face with world-weary scars,as Leonetti & Dumas visit the address.
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8/10
ships that pass in the night
myriamlenys25 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Good, taut police procedural based on a novel by Joseph Harrington. (I never read anything by this author, which sounds like a lack to remedy.) The translation to French society is done very well, keeping and preserving themes such as the superficiality, transience and anonimity of life in a major city. The human cost of such an urban existence can come very high, as illustrated in a scene where two detectives go to a school in order to ask questions about a pupil. Teachers and staff are kind and dedicated, but point out that many of the children disappear somewhere along the line, as a result of their parents moving, losing their jobs, divorcing,... The result is a state of permanent changeability, where no one succeeds in getting a good grasp on the background, problems and capabilities of the various pupils.

Jobert and Ventura, as the detectives, are in fine shape and give good performances. Unfortunately the first ten minutes of the movie are confusing, mainly because someone somewhere thought it would be a good idea to start the story while showing the initial credits. This was not a good idea. After this confusing beginning, the movie proceeds in a clear and linear fashion, enlivened by occasional thumbnail sketches of urban eccentrics. (Watch out for the seemingly normal and civilized lady who treats her pets like infants, but hates every child and adolescent she sees - they're all grinning apes or hot little sluts.)

At one point in the movie - I'm trying to avoid spoilers here - one of the characters gets involved in a savage street fight. The fight is well-choreographed and well-executed, exuding a realistic violence and viciousness. Strangely, the character thus attacked (and beaten up) is capable of continuing his activities, where logic would dictate an urgent hospitalisation, followed by many months of careful rehabilitation. But then, this is a failure common to many movies : people walk away from accidents and attacks that, by rights, should send them to an emergency ward or an undertaker...
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5/10
splendid acting, but the film does not age beautifully
dromasca29 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I watched this film on the European culture channel ARTE mainly for its two great stars, Lino Ventura and Marlene Jobert, which I remembered dearly from their performances in the French movies of the 70s. I was not wrong, it is actually the quality of their acting that holds the whole film or what survived the four decades since its making.

It's a cop story like the ones they loved to film at that point in time and they still love to film nowadays. Ventura is a tired cop, hit by life (he lost his wife and daughter in a car accident) and by the system (he is sent to a non-important job because of a lawyerish intrigue). He pairs with young, enthusiastic and sweet Jobert in searching for a key witness who seems to have evaporated in the urban jungle. Their moves are followed by the mob who tries to avoid their boss being condemned as result of the witness deposition. They find the witness and his kid daughter (the emotional balance of the story) but the ultimate result will be tragic.

While the two principal characters are alive by virtue of the acting of these two wonderful actors the rest of the film is written in quite a conventional manner. Lino Ventura is tough, battered by life and human, Marlene Jobert is beautiful, fragile and naive and has the most beautiful pair of eyes in the history of French cinema which does not lack beautiful eyes. The ending inspired many other films to come, but if remade today the film would be much more tense, much more violent, and more true to reality. 'Dernier domicile connu' does not age well. It's still worth being seen by fans of director Jose Giovani, or of Ventura and Jobert, as one of the solid pieces of their work.
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10/10
Excellent examination of the role of police
udar5522 November 2013
Inspector Marceau Leonetti (Lino Ventura) gets demoted after arresting a young kid whose father has connections. He is assigned to a small town where the biggest crime is helping a kid locate his stolen pigeons and, later, working alongside newbie Jeanne Dumas (Marlène Jobert) to bust perverts in movie theaters. Their careers take an upswing when, unbeknown to Leonetti, his former boss assigns him the futile task of finding a witness in 8 days before a major murder trial. What his superiors didn't count on was Leonetti's tenacity in finding this uncooperative witness and the fact that the accused also has some men out with the same task. This is the third film from director José Giovanni (writer of THE SICILIAN CLAN) and it proves to be a pretty grim affair. There is a lot of commentary on the rat (or should I say ant) race as Leonetti is just a cog in the wheel of justice (at one point Jeanne event comments on his unending searching, asking if he is a robot). Audiences will probably feel the most connection with Jobert's character as she is tackling the assignment with a fresh belief in "the system." Ventura is awesome in the lead role of the seen-it-all vet and he has a great fight scene toward the end. You'll probably see the end coming, but it still has quite an impact thanks to a matter-of-fact presentation by Giovanni.
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9/10
one of the more memorable French thrillers and arguably one of the more influentially hard-nosed policiers of the period.
Weirdling_Wolf27 March 2023
Lauded Writer/Director, Jose Giovanni's classic 70s policier 'Dernier Domicile Connu' is, perhaps, one of the more charismatic French thrillers and arguably remains one of the most influentially hard-nosed policiers of the period. 'Dernier Domicile Connu' excitingly initiates many of the signature street-tough dynamics playfully exaggerated in later landmark thrillers like 'Dirty Harry'. A gritty Gallic precursor to the infinitely more lurid poliziotteschi, that violent mainstay of Italian exploitation so popular during the especially turbulent political unrest of the early 1970s.

Enigmatic, brutally efficient cop Inspector Lionetti (Lino Ventura) suddenly has his stellar, albeit controversial career irreversibly tarnished by some shady internecine political machinations, finding himself humiliatingly demoted to arresting sleazy, cinema-stalking perverts. Lionetti's new female partner, the young, naive, Jeanne Dumas (Marlene Jobert) makes an appealingly sensitive counterpoint to Lionetti's brutalist approach to police procedure. There can be little doubt that a more resplendent union of amiably mismatched cops would be hard to imagine! Unfortunately, this once novel trope is zealously appropriated with infinitely less guile today. Lionetti & Dumas become embroiled in their increasingly fraught, apparently hopeless quest of locating a key witness in a tabloid-splashed murder trial who eluded discovery for 5 years.

'Dernier Domicile Connu' remains a vital, meticulously plotted example of an especially compelling, beautifully performed, emotionally rewarding 70s crime thriller. Not only expressing a clear mastery of the form but rewarding in its many delightful narrative subtleties, amusing quirks and myriad idiosyncrasies. The sublime cinematic chemistry of charismatic screen icon, Lino Ventura and angelic, Joubert provides additional lustre to their richly detailed characters that you care deeply for. Jose Giovanni's gripping crime classic also features one of maestro, Francois de Roubaix's finest, ear-wormingly brilliant scores that funkily completes a stunning ensemble of creative filmmaking excellence.
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8/10
Procedural thriller with a heart
dierregi5 December 2021
Ventura is the seasoned cop who gets punished by his boss and transferred to a secondary precinct and Jobert the idealistic trainee, who must support him during a relentless chase.

A key witness to a mafia crime disappeared five years previously and the guilty mafia boss may get acquitted without the witness evidence.

With five days to go before the end of the trial the unlikely couple run around Paris, trying to find the witness and betting everything on retracing his daughter, a pale, sick but remarkable girl who left an impression on whomever met her.

Unfolding before the digital era, the investigation takes place in the field, which means hundreds of schools, chemists and doctors visited. All this, while the mafioso's gang is following closely, eager to eliminate the witness before the police finds him.

The story is filmed in the suitably melancholic autumn season in rainy Paris and enhanced by suitable score. The twist at the end came unexpectedly to me, but it makes a lot of sense. Very good, no frills, believable story.
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10/10
Bitter ballad in Paris
searchanddestroy-114 May 2021
If you are not French and dream to visit Paris, this outstanding anti heroes story may help you. I have rarely seen a movie depicting a Paris in such a way, thru an investigation. But I also warn you about this unpredictable tale, which will leave a bad taste in the mouth, that's precisely why I love lhis film, that glues you to your seat from beginning to the end. This sensitive way to describe unexpected characters is unforgettable because so disillusioned. But there is just a little goof in the story. Near the end of the film, when the two cops search for the witness and his daughter, they visit a doctor supposed to have this witness and his child as patient; the doctor says that the man and child come to visit him every FIVE WEEKS. And despite the fact that the last visit was precisely five weeks ago, the doctor secretary is able to describe the way the little girl is.dressed. With great accuracy, though she came five weeks ago, no matter she can be dressed in another way. But that's a detail, it doesn't diminish the quality of this very very sad film, among the best of Giovanni. This was one of the - if not the first - crime movies involving buddy policemen, and especially a woman, eleven years before Miou Miou in LA FEMME FLIC. Michel Constantin, despite his more than supporting character, gives a terrific and terrifying performance, watch out the scene where he hits Lino Ventura in the ribs, in a so brutal, fierce, sadistic way, watch his face, his gruesome mean face. He rarely, if never had this face in any of the films he played in.
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10/10
Tough times faced by French actors Lino Ventura and Marlène Jobert in a dramatic thriller directed by José Giovanni.
FilmCriticLalitRao22 October 2013
It was in 1970 that French director/screen writer José Giovanni directed one of his famous films "Dernier Domicile Connu"/Last known address. As the film remained very much true to life, it has still not lost any of its beauty or shine. It is also very much relevant to contemporary times wherein heroes, heroines and their honors, ideas and opinions are brushed aside for certain individuals. In the film, 'Last known address' there is some great work done by actors. Lino Ventura is the one who would not stop at anything to reclaim his lost honor. He has always viewed his honesty as a force. Marlène Jobert's character undergoes major changes especially with regards to her involvement with Lino Ventura. In the beginning, she is shown as a mere colleague but ends up being a companion of life. In many ways, 'Last Known Address' questions whether the price paid by an honest police officer allows anybody to question police forces and their methods in dealing with criminals. Lastly, despite turning itself into a suspense thriller towards the end, this José Giovanni film manages to remain more of a 'drama film'.
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