Film Review
It seems hard to believe that a fairly inconsequential little comedy intended
to dispel deeply ingrained prejudices about life in northern France should
become the most commercially successful film ever made in France. On
the face of it, there is
nothing that can account for the unexpected
success of
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis, and yet in 2008 it had such
a ferociously magnetic attraction for spectators in France that it became
not just a box office hit but the French film that was the biggest hit to
date. It overtook the previous record (17.3 million) held by
La Grande vadrouille (a
landmark French comedy looking like a forerunner of
Allo, Allo) and
finally achieved a mind-boggling 20.5 million. Only one other film
performed better than this in France -
Titanic in 1997, with an audience
of 21.8 million that still appears pretty unassailable.
It's not as if the film's director, Dany Boon, had any great experience of
filmmaking before this. In fact, whilst well-known and well-regarded
as a comic actor, he had only directed one previous film, a fairly routine
comedy titled
La Maison du bonheur
(2006).
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis may be a small step up from
this, but it is by no means the quantum leap that public reaction to the
film might lead you to think. (Although, if you compare it with the
totally execrable
Bronzés
3, which somehow drew 10.4 million spectators two years prior to
this, it is virtually a masterpiece.) Boon had good reason for thinking
he had hit the jackpot with his second directorial attempt. The film
cost 11 million euros to make but it took almost a quarter of a million dollars
in worldwide receipts - proof, if it be needed, that filmmaking these days
is a lottery.
In essence,
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis falls back on that popular standby
of French cinema, the classic buddy movie, with its director Boon partnered
with rising star Kad Merad. In his first leading role, Merad shows
himself to be a sympathetic clown who is ideally suited to unpretentious
populist comedies of this ilk; the ever-likeable Boon is happy to tag along
as his comedy foil. It's a shame that in order to demolish the tired
old clichés about the north (some of which are in fact not clichés
but grim fact - just take the weather, for instance) Boon has to rely on
these, often somewhat lazily, for much of the film's humour.
If there is a well-conceived narrative thread to this film, it is very well
concealed. For the most part it looks like a casually thrown together
jumble consisting of sketches that barely hold together as a coherent piece
of cinema. Much of the humour is second-hand and pretty trite, although
the engaging personalities of the two lead performers and a handful of surprisingly
funny gags prevent it from becoming too wearisome. A collosal box office
hit it may have been, but
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis is nothing more
than flimsy ephemera at its most mediocre. There's no chance of it
ever supplanting
La Grande vadrouille in the hearts of most French
people as the greatest French film comedy.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Dany Boon film:
Rien à déclarer (2011)
Film Synopsis
Philippe Abrams lives in a provincial town in the south of France with his
habitually depressed wife Julie and is happily employed as a branch manager
of the French postal service. At his wife's insistence, Philippe attempts
to get himself transferred to an office in a more attractive location on
the Mediterranean coast, but his attempts to do so, by feigning disability,
do not impress his employers. By way of punishment, he gets his transfer,
but to an obscure little town named Bergues in the north of France.
For Julie, this is the worst thing that can possibly happen. Everyone
knows what life in the north is like. It rains incessantly, there are
no distractions, and the people are cold and unfriendly. With his wife
insisting on staying behind with their son Raphaël, Philippe undertakes
the move to Bergues alone, and his first impressions of the town accord perfectly
with his grim expectations.
Philippe's new colleague, Antoine Bailleul, appears friendly enough, but
his accent is so thick that he can barely understand a word he says.
Gradually, a friendship develops between the two men and Philippe begins
to see another side to the town. Within a few weeks, the refugee from
the sunny south has taken a distinct liking to his new home and finds the
locals are nothing like the unwelcoming heathens he had expected. Naturally,
Philippe keeps in touch with his wife by phone, and as the weeks go by he
realises that absence really does make the heart grow fonder.
Philippe has not known Julie to be so sympathetic and understanding towards
him for years, so he naturally becomes anxious when she expresses a sudden
desire to up sticks and join him in the north. In the hope of putting
off his wife, and thereby placing their marriage on a stronger footing, Philippe
does his utmost to convince her that life in a northern town is every bit
as dire as she thinks. With Julie's unwanted arrival in Bergues imminent,
Philippe enlists the help of his new friends to persuade her that no one
in his right mind would ever want to visit the north, let alone live there...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.