Film Review
Just a few years before he retired, the world's most famous circus
clown Adrien Wettach, better known as Grock, bids a wistful adieu in
this engaging but somewhat uneven valedictory biography, a
Franco-German production half-heartedly directed by Pierre
Billon. Like most "authorised biographies",
Au revoir Monsieur Grock (a.k.a.
Clear the Ring) is not immune from
distorting reality to put its subject in a more favourable light (the
wartime sequences are highly suspect), but this hardly matters.
The main reason for watching the film is to enjoy Grock performing some
of the routines that made him one of the best-loved (and most highly
paid) clowns in the world, including one which was imitated by Charlie
Chaplin and Buster Keaton in
Limelight (1952). Adrien
Osperi and Ted Rémy play Grock respectively as a boy and young
man, but Grock himself shows up, both in make-up and unadorned, in
several scenes. The film's main value is that it preserves for
posterity the work of one of the true comic geniuses of all time,
including his famous "leap from a chair" act which is simply one of
the most amazing things you will ever see.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
It is whilst he was growing up in Switzerland in the late 19th century that
Adrien Wettach quickly became enchanted by circus life. At first he
trained to become an acrobat but it wasn't long before he discovered he had
a talent for making people laugh and that his real metier was as a clown.
It wasn't many years before he became the most famous circus clown in the
world, known to everyone by the name he had adopted - Grock. His popularity
made him one of the wealthiest men in his profession. Now in his seventies,
on the eve of his retirement, Wettach looks back on his past life and
reminds himself of all those years, some happier than others, when he brought
joy to thousands by doing what he did best - playing the clown...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.