Film Review
Any film in which Catherine Frot is smacked repeatedly on the bottom by
André Dussollier has to be worth seeing. Unfortunately, this is the
highpoint of Pascal Thomas's latest Agatha Christie-themed comedy, a
rambling affair which has difficulty holding itself together, despite
some promising trains of thought and a plethora of inspired (and
frankly bizarre) comedy set-pieces. This is Frot and Dussollier's
third outing as Prudence and Bélisaire Beresford (based on
Christie's redoubtable amateur sleuths Tuppence and Tommy Beresford),
the sequel to
Mon petit doigt m'a dit...
(2005) and
Le Crime est notre affaire
(2008). The plot (what there is of it) is snatched from the short
story
The Case of the Missing Lady,
first published in Agatha Christie's
Partners
in Crime anthology in 1929, although you'd need a very large
magnifying glass and quite a bit of imagination to detect any
similarity between the two.
Ever since he delivered the definitive modern big screen Agatha
Christie adaptation with
L'Heure zéro (2007),
Pascal Thomas seems to have increasingly less respect for the esteemed
Queen of Crime, and
Associés
contre le crime... is so far removed from Christie's whodunit
concept that you wonder why Thomas bothered to give her a credit at
all. Any intrigue, mystery or suspense that may have been in the
original short story goes out the window, and in their place is a
confused but generally amiable comedy run-around which looks as if it
may have been cooked up by Hergé (the creator of Tintin) and
Peter Sellers whilst under the influence of mind altering drugs.
There is certainly more Jacques Clouseau in the film than Miss Marple,
and so much of the humour is so weird and brazenly politically
incorrect that you can't help wondering who the film is targeted at
(ageing Agatha Christie-obsessed rockers?). At its heart, the
film appears to be a light-hearted satire on our obsession with staying
young - if Thomas had stuck with this theme and explored it in more
depth he might have taken less of a beating from the critics (who were
no doubt inspired by the bottom spanking scene); instead what we
get is a rudderless comedy that goes off in all directions without much
of a clue as to what it is meant to be about. Yes, come to think
of it, it does sound a bit like
Death
on the Nile...
Associés contre le crime...
may be the least well constructed of Pascal Thomas's Agatha Christie
films to date, but it does at least deliver plenty of laughs, although
the film does take a long time to get into its stride and some of the
gags die of exhaustion and shame before they reach their punch
line. On the plus side, the chemistry between André
Dussollier and Catherine Frot is as intoxicating as ever and, more than
anything, it is the relationship between their characters that provides
the substance to this film; everything else (bar the boozing baby gag)
is really just window dressing. The dependable, down-to-Earth
Dussollier could not be more different from the excitable, endlessly
feisty Frot, but they spark off one another as well as any other great
comedy duo you can think of (Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy
spring instantly to mind).
There is a delicious irony in the
idea of Catherine Frot playing a character who is pursuing someone who
has - apparently - discovered the elixir of life. If anyone has
already found the secret of eternal youth it is assuredly
Mademoiselle Frot... Asthmatic and slightly doddery in places,
Associés contre le crime...
is unlikely to end up as everyone's all-time comedy classic, but thanks
to its two indefatigable leads and some mind-boggling excursions into
the strange and surreal, not to mention the aforementioned bottom
smacking scene, it manages to justify its existence. However, as
I write this (by moonlight in an old, dark house that creaks and trembles
in anticipation of some foul deed) I can just hear someone with the
initials A.C. spinning frantically in her grave and hissing a lament
that sounds uncannily like: "Come back Margaret Rutherford - all is
forgiven...
© James Travers 2012
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Next Pascal Thomas film:
Valentin Valentin (2015)
Film Synopsis
Bélisaire Beresford could not be happier when his wife Prudence
decides that their amateur sleuthing days are over. Now they can
look forward to a long and peaceful retirement. But whilst
Bélisaire takes up painting and other leisurely activities,
Prudence still has a hankering after adventure and cannot resist being
lured back into her old habits when she learns that a rich Russian
heiress has gone missing. Bélisaire has no choice but to
go after Prudence as she throws herself into her latest adventure,
which leads them to a Swiss beauty clinic for the seriously
wealthy. Before they know it, they are on the trail of a
mysterious scientist who appears to have discovered the secret of
eternal youth...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.