Thu 26 Dec 2024
A 1001 Midnights Review: FREDERICK FORSYTH – The Day of the Jackal.
Posted by Steve under 1001 Midnights , Reviews[9] Comments
by Susan Dunlap
FREDERICK FORSYTH – The Day of the Jackal. Viking, hardcover, 1971. Bantam, paperback, 1972. Reprinted many times. Film: UK, 1973. TV series: Peacock, 2024- .
As a Reuters correspondent, Frederick Forsyth reported from London, Paris, and East Berlin in the Sixties, and he brings to his fictional works the expected objectivity and thoroughness of a talented reporter. Against a background of real events and real people, he places both his fictional heroes and antiheroes: professionals in their fields who arc impeccable in carrying out their jobs and arc governed by unshakable commitments to their own internal standards.
The heroes frequently combat established but morally corrupt government agencies, and their victories over them come about through preparation and planning. There is a great deal of motion in Forsyth’s work, and the scene shifts frequently between the heroes and the antiheroes, creating a tension that is sustained until the last page.
The Day of the Jackal is Forsyth’s best-known and most meticulously drawn suspense tale. Seeking the best of professional killers to take over from their own bunglers, French dissidents intent on assassinating Charles de Gaulle hire the Jackal. Working alone, the Jackal makes painstaking preparations to obtain each essential piece of equipment from the appropriate craftsmen, whom he either gives a nodding respect, views with silent contempt, or occasionally, disposes of.
In counterpoint to the Jackal’ activities are scenes in which the authorities work to uncover the plot, and when Commissaire Claude Lebel, “the best detective in France,” is brought in on the case, the contest becomes an even match.
Forsyth’s skill is such that, despite the Jackal’s morally unacceptable line of work, we feel sympathy for the character. His integrity and total commitment to his internal standards are commendable — regardless of what those standards are.
And the chess game between these ultimate professionals — which takes them back and forth across Europe and the English Channel — is a joy to behold. The game grows tenser and tenser, until its climax — and then Forsyth gives us one more superb twist.
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Reprinted with permission from 1001 Midnights, edited by Bill Pronzini & Marcia Muller and published by The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, 2007. Copyright © 1986, 2007 by the Pronzini-Muller Family Trust.
December 26th, 2024 at 4:14 pm
This was a heck of a thriller and a pretty good movie, too.
December 26th, 2024 at 9:44 pm
I’ve always designated it one of the best book-to-movie transitions in cinema. A rare case where the film is as fascinating as the novel.
There’s a lot to say about this top-tier piece of fiction –I’ve always worked hard to introduce it to people, talked it up at length among thriller fans. Some get it, some don’t.
But there was a time when every bookstore, every public library, every k-12 school library, even any rotating book spindle in a corner drugstore had tattered copies of ‘Jackal’ out in plain sight.
It was that popular, it set that high a standard. Forsythe’s prose is particularly supple and buttery. One can go back and delve into ‘Jackal’ the same as one can with Tolkien and get lost in it over and over again.
For years on end, ‘Black Sunday’ and ‘Day of the Jackal’ were usually paired for sale side-by-side –with maybe some Jack Higgins or Alistair MacLean–long before Morrell and Cussler came along. The vivid cover art of their titles, was always in ready view. At least that was the case on the USA east coast where I was. Forsythe, Harris, Higgins, MacLean, & LeCarre led the heyday of the international thriller.
December 27th, 2024 at 4:55 pm
Glowing words indeed, Lazy. You make me wish I’d not stupidly put off reading this book for so long. Thanks for sharing!
December 27th, 2024 at 3:35 pm
I highly recommend the ten episodes series on PEACOCK that takes the book up to date. Extremely well done with high level actors. And there will be a season two!!
December 27th, 2024 at 4:57 pm
You told me about the TV series earlier this week, Paul, and it’s been on my To Be Watched list ever since. Now to follow through!
December 27th, 2024 at 8:21 pm
While the series is highly entertaining it violates almost everything Forsyth and Fred Zimmerman did with the book and the film changing the Jackal from an almost mythical cypher to a character with almost too much back story.
Eddie Redmayne is fine in the lead though and the tension is quite real, though it suffers in the end from over-extending the plot for a second season, and I think making the protagonist hunting the Jackal more problematic than she has to be.
The film is very close to the book, but the book has its own pleasures. Forsyth wrote a number of good books over his career but seldom came close to the quality of his first three, this, DOGS OF WAR, and THE ODESSA FILES. Perhaps only THE FOURTH PROTOCOL comes anywhere near the impact of JACKAL in terms of suspense.
Beyond the broad outline there is really only a little of the book in the series, but the series mostly stands on its own save, as I said, extending it over two seasons may be good for revenue, but it beats the hell out of any suspense it might engender.
December 28th, 2024 at 12:57 pm
I’m surprised no one has mentioned the 1997 remake of the movie, as The Jackal, with Bruce Willis and Richard Gere. This is the only version of the story I’ve encountered but I thought it was pretty good.
December 28th, 2024 at 1:10 pm
Thanks, Kenneth. I don’t know how I missed it, but I did. It’s mentioned on the book’s Wiki page
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_of_the_Jackal
saying:
“A film titled The Jackal, directed by Michael Caton-Jones, was released in 1997. The film bears little resemblance to the plot of the novel or the original film, featuring an unnamed assassin (Bruce Willis) being hired by the Russian mafia to kill the First Lady of the United States. Both Zinnemann and Forsyth lobbied to have the film’s name changed to disassociate it from Forsyth’s novel.”
And for those who might be interested, here’s the link to the Wiki page for the current TV series:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_of_the_Jackal_(TV_series)
December 28th, 2024 at 9:57 pm
Some of us were just being nice not mentioning THE JACKAL, not fair kicking Bruce Willis when he is down and all that.