Film Review
A rural fable intended merely to entertain, or a canny foretaste
of the dramatic upheavals which were to come just a few months after its release in 1968? When
Yves Robert made
Alexandre le
bienheureux, a film based on his own novel, he could hardly have
known the significance it would subsequently acquire, as a cute but
cogent anti-authority, anti-capitalist statement, but what is most
surprising about this film is how relevant it seems today. Who
cannot warm to the idea of walking away from the ulcer-inducing rat
race and pursuing a life of blissful indolence, ambling through sunny
cornfields, lying lazily on the riverbank and training your
hyper-intelligent pet dog to beg, borrow and steal all that your
stomach craves? Okay, so it's absurdly idealistic but the film
makes its point, in a similar vein to that other French classic, Rene
Clair's
À nous la liberté
(1931). Man is not born to be a slave to mindless drudgery.
Man is his own master (until the day he gets a wedding ring on his finger, that is).
Alexandre le bienheureux is
one of Yves Robert's most delightful films, ranking alongside his
earlier
La Guerre des boutons (1962) in
its buccolic charm and anticipating his subsequent hit
comedies. As he would later do in his celebrated diptych
La Gloire de mon père
(1990) /
Le Château de ma mère
(1990), Robert saturates nearly every frame of the film with the exquisite
natural beauty of the French countryside, whilst also capturing for
posterity the rural way of life (circa 1970), perhaps more vividly than
any other filmmaker of his generation (in this respect, he was a worthy
successor to his hero, Marcel Pagnol). Whilst the film has
something of the saccharine sweetness of the old
Lassie films (albeit with a
photogenic little dog which manages to surpass both Lassie and
Hergé's Milou in the charisma and cerebral stakes), it is shot
through with subversive humour, amid a seemingly endless
series of the juiciest visual gags outside a Buster Keaton film.
This is a film that operates at many levels, appealing as much to
children as it does to adults, and no wonder it was a commercial hit on
its first release (attracting an audience of over two million) and
remains a much-loved classic of French cinema.
This was the film that gave actor Philippe Noiret his big break,
establishing him as one of France's most successful, and most highly
regarded, screen actors. Noiret had previously appeared in
supporting roles in such films as Louis Malle's
Zazie
dans le métro (1960) and Jean-Paul Rappeneau's
La Vie de château (1966),
but it was his sympathetic portrayal of the contented sloth-like rebel
in
Alexandre le bienheureux
that made him a star and pretty well defined his screen
persona. With his easygoing, avuncular charm, Noiret is
perfect for the part, although he does come close to being almost totally
eclipsed by his equally charismatic canine co-star, Kaly, whose acting
career, alas, was limited to this one film. (In this reviewer's
opinion at least, Kaly is far more deserving of the Cannes
Palm Dog award than Uggy, the scene-stealing pooch in Michel
Hazanavicius's 2011 silent homage
The
Artist.)
Needless to say, with two such strong lead performers, the supporting
cast hardly gets much of a look in, not that there is any shortage of
talent. Prominent in the comedy chorus are two actors who would
shortly become major stars in their own right - Marlène Jobert
and Pierre Richard - and French film addicts will have no trouble
spotting Tsilla Chelton, the maiden aunt from Hell in Etienne
Chatiliez's
Tatie Danielle (1990).
Jean Carmet, another well-known comic character actor, is on hand to
lend some comedy muscle when required and the camera-friendly
Françoise Brion strikes her blow for women's lib (setting the
cause back by at least ten years) as Alexandre's despotic wife.
A cast of this calibre is hardly necessary when you have such a superb
duo as Philippe Noiret and an impossibly cute dog laying claim to virtually
every last photon of the limelight but it helps to beef up the gag
quotient and adds lustre to what is assuredly one of Yves Robert's most
enjoyable and timely comedies. Add to that a memorable theme song
(
Le Ciel, la terre et l'eau) performed by
Eurovision Song Contest winner Isabelle Aubret
and you can immediately see why the film is so fondly remembered.
If this doesn't make you give up
your busy city lifestyle and embrace the rural idyll, nothing will.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Yves Robert film:
Clérambard (1969)
Film Synopsis
All that Alexandre wants is to live a quiet life, to be as free and
contented as the birds and beasts of his treasured countryside.
Unfortunately, he is married to someone who acts like a one-woman
Fascist dictatorship, expecting him to spend every waking hour working
at full tilt on their extensive farm. When Alexandre's wife dies
in a car accident, he can hardly believe his good fortune. At
last, he is a free man, and can live as he chooses. So,
naturally, he decides to spend the rest of his life in bed, relying on
his little dog to fetch whatever provisions he needs from the village
shop. Alexandre's conduct is considered scandalous by his
neighbours, who do everything they can to drive him from his
bed. Alexandre holds out, defiant in his happy indolence,
until he is visited by Agathe, the attractive grocer's daughter, who
has made up her mind to marry him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.