Film Review
The pressures of working for
Continental Films seem not to have dented Fernandel's
enthusiasm one iota and in this entertaining farce - which he also directed - the great
comic actor gives a typically ebullient performance. The Nazi-run company was clearly
keen to exploit Fernandel's popularity, and maybe allowing the comedian to direct the
film was a cheap way of buying his complicity. In any event, it wasn't Fernandel's
first directing job - he'd already cut his directorial teeth on
Simplet,
made just before the Occupation. It is not hard to see why, in France's
darkest hour, a film like this would have been greatly appreciated by the masses.
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Fernandel film:
Adhémar ou le jouet de la fatalité (1951)
Film Synopsis
To look at him, you would hardly think that Adrien Moulinet, a modest bank
cashier in his mid-thirties, would be marked for greatness. But greatness
takes many forms and Adrien's moment comes when he has a sudden brainwave
and invents the motorised roller-skate. There's no knowing where this
could lead! The whole concept of personal transportation could be revolutionised,
making Adrien an incredibly wealthy man overnight. He might get married,
buy a house and perhaps even start a family. But there's a catch...
At present, Adrien hasn't any spare cash and no experience of perfecting
and promoting inventions, so it seems that his creation, brilliant as it
undoubtedly is, will never see the light of day after all. Then
he has his second stroke of good fortune - when he meets Jules, an unemployed
advertising man who is more than willing to offer him the benefit of his
knowledge. Set upon by gangsters, Adrien then finds himself in a health
spa, where he gets to know the daughters of a banker. With these new
contacts, Adrien is finally in a position to turn his dream into a very lucrative
reality. Whereas most people make a gradual ascent up the social ladder,
Adrien is about to go shooting up like a cork from a bottle of fizz...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.