Among the guilty: a France in mirrors by Philippe Brunel
Philippe Brunel's "Le cercle des obligés" (Grasset, 2025) is a hybrid form of roman vrai, journalistic research, and autobiographical reflection. Its starting point is the infamous Markovic affair: in 1968, Stefan Markovic, a Serb, a shadowy figure, and Alain Delon's "doublure lumière," is found murdered—an episode in which cinema, politics, and the underworld intersect in a disturbing way. Twenty-five years later, an unnamed first-person narrator, a former reporter, picks up the trail of his mentor, Pierre Salberg. He returns to the scenes of the past to continue an unfinished manuscript and, at the same time, to reconstruct himself. The France of the novel is the country after 1968—a country caught between political decadence and cultural splendor. Brunel portrays this period as a spectacle permanent, a spectacle and an illusion. The economic miracle years are over, and behind the facade of Gaullism, weariness, corruption, and moral decay are spreading. Brunel depicts the emergence of a new pop culture in which politics, show business, and crime intertwine. Alain Delon embodies "le héros absolu," but also the symbol of a generation that views beauty with suspicion. The novel quotes entire passages from interviews, newspaper articles, and police reports—a collage of the media surface. Popular figures (Melville, Bardot, Fallaci, Visconti, Aznavour) appear not as mere names, but as symbols of an aesthetic that transforms the real into the cinematic.
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