Question on cleverness


Many in here consider the Jackal clever, almost deserving to finally achieve his aspirations.
I wonder, what did I miss? He was seriously good at weaponry, and shooting. And killing with bare hands. But strategy? In this movie, he would have lost hands down without the spy girl.
He went through the border just a few minutes short of the publication of his name, so he was simply lucky.
Likewise, the exchange of registration plates. He'd have to assume that the two would notice, maybe half an hour later, and would remember their own plates, and then the colour of the car was irrelevant. Had he worked correctly as before, killing the love birds was a must at that moment.
And most of all, I don't grasp the Madame. He knew he was being tracked. He had little chance by starting some love story, and even less by visiting her in the castle. She could at any moment have given him away, and that she didn't is a tad unlikely. She had noticed from her own questioning that the Jackal must have done something worse than forgetting to pay his rent. ;-)
And he still had his next alias to be used, the Danish teacher. So what's the point getting involved with Madame?
If I miss something here, I'd be happy to stand corrected.

And one more thing, minor, I didn't have a chance to watch the original. So I wonder if he spoke accent-free French, and most of all Danish, since he met the chap from Denmark. Logically, they'd be speaking Danish, and then he'd even have to speak the accent of that place (I forgot) of the teacher.

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[deleted]

In the book, chapter 18, the Madame finds the gun and she says to him he is with the OAS and wants to kill De Gaulle. He then kills her. At least in my edition, she does not offer to help him. She is a little more astute in the book than in the film, where the character is somewhat love-struck. In the book, she is not questioned by the police as she is in the film.
Overall the Jackal is quite clever although the Madame stuff is not as well explained in the film as in the book.


"Chicken soup - with a *beep* straw."

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"So I wonder if he spoke accent-free French".

This issue is glossed over entirely as he always speaks English, just as everybody else in the film, including the French.


"He met the chap from Denmark. Logically, they'd be speaking Danish".

He never spoke to any chaps from Denmark.



"facts are stupid things" Ronald Reagan

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In the book, he speaks excellent but not quite accent-free French. The forger makes an ID for him as coming from Colmar in Alsace, on the grounds that the people there (many of whom speak German dialects at home) speak French with a hint of an accent rather like his.
In the book, Rodin mentions to his associates that the Jackal speaks fluent French, and this is a factor in favouring him as the best among the potential assassins they are considering hiring.

"Chicken soup - with a *beep* straw."

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"He met the chap from Denmark. Logically, they'd be speaking Danish".

He never spoke to any chaps from Denmark.


Yeah, Jules (the gay man in the sauna) is a Frenchman who tells the Jackal "I know Copenhagen quite well". The Jackal then claims to be from the Danish town of Silkeborg. One assumes they were conversing in French (not Danish), and Jules would have thought the Jackal was speaking French with a Danish accent. If that makes sense.

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[deleted]

You might just as easily question the cleverness- and competence- of the authorities.

It was pure speculation that led the police to ponder that the French for "jackal"- chacal- might be associated with the name, Charles Calthrop. They were actually following the wrong lead. It was only because they found Calthop's unused passport that led them to consider the jackal was using a false one. If Calthrop had been at home, or taken his passport with him, Scotland Yard might never have uncovered the name, Duggan.

Also, the entire investigation was predicated on the scant information provided by Wolenski, while being tortured. Would Wolenski really have broken down? He was willing to die for his cause, so probably not. This is a plot point that bothers me, that torture produces results.

If either of these two leads had failed, the police would have been nowhere near catching the Jackal, and he would have succeeded. It was really just dumb luck that enabled the authorities- and Lebel- to thwart the plot.

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[deleted]

It was pure speculation that led the police to ponder that the French for "jackal"- chacal- might be associated with the name, Charles Calthrop. They were actually following the wrong lead. It was only because they found Calthop's unused passport that led them to consider the jackal was using a false one. If Calthrop had been at home, or taken his passport with him, Scotland Yard might never have uncovered the name, Duggan.

Also, the entire investigation was predicated on the scant information provided by Wolenski, while being tortured. Would Wolenski really have broken down? He was willing to die for his cause, so probably not. This is a plot point that bothers me, that torture produces results.

If either of these two leads had failed, the police would have been nowhere near catching the Jackal, and he would have succeeded. It was really just dumb luck that enabled the authorities- and Lebel- to thwart the plot.


This.

It's been a while since I read the book, so I can only comment on the film's depiction of the investigation.

But everything involving the authorities "picking up the scent" always struck me as pretty odd and a bit contrived. Meaning that it didn't really have anything to do with good police-work or mistakes made by the Jackal ... but that it seemed like "cheating" on the part of the story-teller (either Forsyth or the screenwriter).
The authorities more or less seem to stumble upon the Jackal. One of the British investigators even says that Calthrop might just as well be on holiday inside the UK - which, in the end, turns out to be the case. So picking up the Jackal's trail was just a product of speculation ("Cha - Cal") and blind luck. And I'm not saying that luck can't be a factor in this kind of case - but it's a bit of a let-down for the writer to help out the authorities against an antagonist that has been built up to be this super-professional who doesn't really make mistakes.

But wait.. there's more.

The Jackal's behavior once he starts to move towards France is also quite puzzling.

1. We see him getting pulled out of traffic at Ventimiglia for no reason (apparent to him) and inside the customs-house he's confronted with loads of other travelers who fit his own physical description (early/mid 30s, blond hair, 1.75m in height). Shouldn't that set off his alarm-bells and tell him the police are probably onto him and his fake identity?

2. He nonetheless continues from the border to Nice, calls his OAS-contact and is told that "the Jackal is blown". But then continues on to a hotel near Grasse where he still uses his Duggan ID to check in. With all the info he has at this point, he should assume that using this identity will bring the cops to the hotel very quickly.

3. Instead of staying out of sight at the hotel, he mingles with the other guests and even seduces a fellow guest - creating lots of potential witnesses for the police to question once they arrive.

4. Next he causes a traffic accident on a virtually empty road, losing his means of transport in the process. He leaves the car in plain sight on the road and then decides to look up his conquest from the hotel.

5. Instead of using his lover's place as a hide-out, he decides to kill the woman because she suspects that he's up to something fishy. And since she's not living in a one-room flat in Paris but in a nice chateau complete with servants who will detect the body, he has no hope of that killing going unnoticed. Meaning he leaves another easy breadcrumb for police to follow *and* a means for them to potentially track him since he's also taking the woman's car to flee the scene.

6. Only after all of this does he finally decide to dump the Duggan-identity and switch to a new one.


Why did he even have the Danish identity? His Duggan-persona was clearly meant to be his "main" identity, the French veteran was meant for carrying out the assassination and escape from Paris ... so the Dane must've been a fallback identity in case Duggan gets made. So why didn't he switch to the Dane right after the OAS told him that Jackal was blown? If he had done that (and possibly switched cars or at least dumped the Alfa), the authorities would've lost his trail somewhere on the Cote d'Azur.



S.

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1. We see him getting pulled out of traffic at Ventimiglia for no reason (apparent to him) and inside the customs-house he's confronted with loads of other travelers who fit his own physical description (early/mid 30s, blond hair, 1.75m in height). Shouldn't that set off his alarm-bells and tell him the police are probably onto him and his fake identity?

2. He nonetheless continues from the border to Nice, calls his OAS-contact and is told that "the Jackal is blown". But then continues on to a hotel near Grasse where he still uses his Duggan ID to check in. With all the info he has at this point, he should assume that using this identity will bring the cops to the hotel very quickly.

Not really. After the phone call in Nice, he has to make the following assumptions:

Wolenski talked, but Wolenski only knew his codename ("Jackal") and his physical appearance, which perfectly explains the situation with all the blond guys being checked at the border post. The Jackal has to assume that the Duggan papers are not compromised - otherwise he would have been arrested right there. That's why he uses this identity at the hotel.

3. Instead of staying out of sight at the hotel, he mingles with the other guests and even seduces a fellow guest

He needs to avoid hotels and go under the radar, which is the very point of seducing Madame (and later the homo). Once he realizes that the cops are on to her (and Duggan), he switches to Lundquist right away.

You are correct about the mistake of using Madame's car to drive to Tulle, though. This was almost certain to blow his new identity as soon as the car was found and the guards at the station questioned. Maybe he should have gone to Toulouse instead of little Tulle, and in a random car instead of hers.

But remember, nothing really matters because in the end, Lebel randomly appears at the sniper's nest, chats with the gendarme and they storm the building. This would have happened anyway, regardless of the entire plot prior to that.

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Everything was about buying time.

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So what's the point getting involved with Madame?
The point is to get a place to stay outside of hotels etc. (which are all monitored by the authorities). Remember how shocked the cops are when they crack the Lundquist identity but cannot find him on the hotel lists? He tricked them by finding private accommodation, and that's the point of his sexual involvement with Madame, the gay dude etc.

As for being clever/foolish, making mistakes etc., remember that this was intentionally written as a close cat-and-mouse game. For the game to stay close, each side has to throw the other a crumb every now and then. It's like these stupid modern video games with "rubberband AI". Know that? Imagine a racing game. If you fall behind, the computer AI cars will DELIBERATELY slow down to help you catch up. But if you outpace them, they magically catch up to you, even at speeds that are physically impossible. The race will always be close, at the cost of plausibility. This movie script works very much like that, but it is pretty good at hiding it (unlike said video games).

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his relationship with was to avoid checking into a motel/hotel and to get her car.

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