Kill the Referee

1984 [FRENCH]

Action / Crime / Sport / Thriller

1
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 33% · 2 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 33%
IMDb Rating 6.1/10 10 653 653

Please enable your VPΝ when downloading torrents

If you torrent without a VPΝ, your ISP can see that you're torrenting and may throttle your connection and get fined by legal action!

Get Surf VPΝ

Plot summary

Michel, a referee has to suffer the consequences of having whistled a penalty against a team which is supported by football hooligans.

Top cast

Carole Laure as Martine Vannier
Joseph Michael Roth as Un supporter
Daniel Perche as Le spectateur impartial
Dominique Zardi as Un supporter
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
864.6 MB
1280*546
French 2.0
NR
ro  
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
Seeds 28
1.57 GB
1920*818
French 2.0
NR
ro  
23.976 fps
1 hr 34 min
Seeds 59

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by eightylicious 4 / 10

À mort l'arbitre ! - Football in French films (part 2)

NOTE: This review should be read in conjunction with my review of "Coup de tête" (1978).It is an oxymoron that the word "arbitrary" has the same roots as the word "arbitre". Something that is arbitrary defies the law, happens illogically. The "arbitre", on the other hand, is the referee, the one who imposes the law in the football field. And for this, he is often the victim of attacks by fanatics.It is difficult to determine why one becomes a sport fanatic. Influence from friends, passion with the sport are some of the factors. Regardless, the fanatics' actions often result to the deaths of innocents, and blot the copybook of the sport. Jean-Pierre Mocky's work "À mort l'arbitre !" examines exactly this exaggerated behaviour of football fanatics and hooligans.The film revolves around a referee, Michel (Eddy Mitchell) who attracts the wrath of some hooligans when he whistles a penalty for the team they support. Their leader, Rico (Michel Serrault) decides to punish the referee in the most despicable of ways: to kill him.This is one of the few films in French cinema that have football as their topic. In the first part of my examination of the role of football in French cinema, I had written that football mostly serves as the occasion to examine deeper social issues, as exemplified in the movie "Coup de tête" (1978). Mocky's work, on the other hand, revolves completely around the sport, especially one of its most negative aspects, that of blind fanaticism.The hooligans in the movie are clearly presented as the villains; they have no redeeming qualities, being either so cartoonish that they border on the comical, or so preposterous that no justification can be found for their actions. Rico's neurotic nature and deep hate for anyone who doesn't side with his team classify him on the second category.Contrary to other films, that have tried to show the human side of the hooligans and the societal reasons because of which they engage in their often lethal actions, Mocky's film is a criticism of their bringing violence to a beloved sport. This is why he portrays them so hyperbolically. This way, every human quality is lost and all that remains is their villainous side.While Mocky has been characterized the most anarchic of French directors, in this film he takes the side of the order as exemplified by the referee. Michel whistles the penalty because this is fair, and not due to any negative inclination towards Rico's team. The fact that the hooligans behave so irrationally to someone that is innocent reinforces Mocky's inclination to the referee, without which football would be a barbarous sport, without any of the rules that give it its relative civility and make it appropriate for a general audience.In the film, the players don't play a single role. For, it is not them that cause the violence associated with the sport, but the hooligans. In most cases, when a death is caused by a hooligan attack, the players of all teams unite and send a message of piece. The hooligans, though, don't have such cooperative instincts. They do what they do for their individual team. The other teams and their supporters are viewed as enemies. And, when someone harms their team, they must pay, like poor Michel in the movie.It s unfortunate that the film's plot also has truly disappointing elements. What at first is an examination of the behaviour of hooligans evolves into a thriller, that even has a car chase in the last sequence. Whilst the director's choice to show the personal life of the referee was maybe meant as an attempt at humanising him more, it serves more as a diversion from the film's real subject. The weak score, typical synth music of the time, has neither artistic merit nor hit potential and sounds bland and forgettable.Mocky's film is a condemnation of violence in football, of the mentality that creates hooligans, that is unfortunately combined with a much overdramatic story. Still, it is commendable for its attempt at examining the sensitive topic of hooliganism in French football when the topic was largely absent from films.
Reviewed by dbdumonteil 7 / 10

the "beast" must die

Like Claude Chabrol's, Jean Pierre Mocky's CV is filled with a very long list of films but if the former's one includes a generous crop of masterworks, you can count on the fingers of your hand, the works which reach this scale in Mocky's copious filmography. "A Mort l'Arbitre" should be on the top of his most palatable pieces of work. Even if the somewhat botched job of the venture can irritate, it's a work that bears the hallmark of its auteur and is quite well controlled in the starting point and its development.Because he whistled a penalty which made the local team lose, Maurice Bruno (Eddy Mitchell) is hunted down by a bunch of wild supporters led by Rico (Michel Serrault, one of Mocky's favorites). In spite of the efforts made by the police superintendent Granowski (Jean Pierre Mocky) flanked by his female partner, the situation's getting out of hand..."A crowd is dumb, she always follows the craziest one". Mocky's opinion is perfectly illustrated in his work. The filmmaker plumps for a tawdry society phenomenon which is still a topical one more than twenty years after the shooting of the film: dogged football hooligans who are ready to commit acts of violence when something's wrong at a football game. Made in a quite homespun style, Mocky's film conjures up a discomforting climate thanks to a judicious choice of the scenery (Maurice's apartment located in an eerie, imposing place the underground gallery at the end of the film) and a suspense deftly maintained.If you must choose 10 films by Mocky to remember, this one would have a meaty place.
Reviewed by nicholas.rhodes 7 / 10

Ugly and violent - limited in audience attraction - well acted !

Read more IMDb reviews

2 Comments

Be the first to leave a comment