An Ordinary Case review – Daniel Auteuil directs and stars in tense Ruth Rendell-ish crime procedural

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"Daniel Auteuil's 'An Ordinary Case' Explores Legal Drama in Subdued True Crime Narrative"

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The film "An Ordinary Case," directed and co-written by Daniel Auteuil, presents a fictionalized true crime drama that leans towards a more subdued and stately narrative compared to typical true crime productions. While it includes a singular gruesome crime-scene photograph, the film’s tone aligns more closely with the works of Ruth Rendell, emphasizing psychological depth over sensationalism. The original French title, "Le Fil" (The Thread), hints at both an incriminating thread found on the victim's body and the unraveling of a legal argument, suggesting that minor details could potentially lead to significant consequences. The plot is inspired by a real case chronicled by Jean-Yves Moyart, a criminal defense lawyer who passed away in 2021 and shared his insights under the pseudonym “Maître Mô.”

Grégory Gadebois stars as Nicolas Milik, a devoted husband and father whose life spirals out of control when he is accused of murdering his alcoholic wife, Cécile. Auteuil plays the principled lawyer Maître Monier, who becomes deeply invested in Milik's case, convinced of his client's innocence despite the mounting evidence against him. The film unfolds at a measured pace, with Auteuil’s performance reflecting a detached yet compelling approach as he navigates the courtroom and his personal life alongside fellow lawyer Maître Annie Debret, portrayed by Sidse Babett Knudsen. The narrative gains momentum in its final act, culminating in a tense exchange between Monier and Milik that imbues the earlier scenes with newfound significance. While the film may lack the ambiguity seen in contemporary dramas, it presents a classic legal thriller that invites viewers to consider the weight of justice and the fragility of truth. "An Ordinary Case" became available on digital platforms starting July 7.

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Here is a fictionalised true crime drama, but one that is more stately and sedate than the garish procedural brutality of regular true crime. There is one gruesome crime-scene photo, but otherwise this could really have been based on something by Ruth Rendell. It is co-written and directed by its star Daniel Auteuil and the original French title is Le Fil (The Thread), after an incriminating thread of material found on the corpse – or perhaps it means the thread of logic behind a legal argument, the loose thread which, if pulled sufficiently, might cause the whole thing to collapse.

The action is based on a case recounted byJean-Yves Moyart, a criminal defence lawyer, who blogged under the name “Maître Mô” and who died in 2021. Grégory Gadebois plays Nicolas Milik (“Ahmed” in Moyart’s blog), a devoted, careworn husband to his alcoholic wife Cécile and caring dad to five children. When Milik is accused of murdering his wife, with a local bar owner apparently an accomplice, principled lawyer Maître Monier (Auteuil) takes the case; passionately convinced of his client’s innocence but finding himself in an increasingly tense situation.

An Ordinary Case is, mostly, a rather low-key movie whose incidental details of obsession and crime are oddly underplayed; the same goes for Auteuil’s rather detached performance, gliding through scenes in court and at home with his partner and fellow lawyer Maître Annie Debret (Sidse Babett Knudsen). Yet the film snaps into shape after the verdict in the final act and a tense conversation between Monier and Milik has a force that lends a retrospective charge to what has gone before; their final conversation raises the stakes yet further.

This is not exactly a drama of ambiguity, like Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall: it is more old-fashioned than that. Perhaps Auteuil needed to give it more energy on both sides of the camera, yet there is a charge in its deferred revelation.

An Ordinary Case is on digital platforms from 7 July.

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Source: The Guardian