Film Review
Oh, what a tangled web... The perils of living in a post-truth world
are brought home with a vengeance in this fiendishly convoluted farce, based
on a play by Michel Duran and directed with his customary comic verve by
director Jean Boyer. As one outrageous deception is mercilessly trounced
by another, and then another, until the battling protagonists lose themselves
(and all sense of reality) in a thick forest of elaborate lies, you are left
feeling as if your head is about to explode, and the only thing that prevents
the film from being the most excruciating torture is that it is hilarious
from start to finish - thanks to the lively turns from its magnificent comedy
ensemble.
Boléro takes its title, naturally, from that famous piece by
Maurice Ravel, the one that seems to go on and on and on forever as you listen
to it in the forlorn hope that you will live long enough to see the end of
it. How fitting that this should be the piece that drives poor, easily
rattled André Luguet to distraction, proving that whatever other virtues
Ravel's music may have it is no substitute for a cup of Lemsip. Subjected
to an unceasing onslaught of Bolero as he tries to navigate his way through
a jungle of fibs, is it any wonder that Luguet becomes so far gone that he
ends up vocalising the demonic theme in a dying man's delirium - a fate that
is no doubt commonplace amongst devotees of Ravel's music. Denise Grey,
apparently immune to the harmful effects of this musical composition, is
the one who subjects Mr Luguet to this terrible ordeal, aided and abetted
by Arletty (in the most fantastically implausible headgear you can imagine)
and a butch Jacques Dumesnil, who looks like a left-over from a James Cagney
movie.
It's hard not to be dazzled by the star power that the film chucks out at
us, like a supernova gone berserk, but it's worth remembering that the film
was made during the dark days of the Occupation and wartime French audiences
needed far more than your desultory little comedy to keep their spirits up.
If your average American screwball comedy of the 1930s scores 8 on a scale
of one to ten in dizzying energy output,
Boléro probably rates
about 11 and a half. You can't see the wires, but I'll wager each member
of the principal cast was wired up to some kind of dynamo, if not the national
grid. You've never seen such a feverish exhibition of hyperactive performers.
Not only was Jean Boyer one of the most prolific and successful French film
directors of the 1930s and '40s, he had an almost unbeaten track record when
it came to turning out comedies that French cinema audiences of this period
would delight in. Arletty had featured in two of his earlier comedies
-
La Chaleur du sein
(1938) and
Circonstances
atténuantes (1939) - and in doing so proved her worth as a
highly capable comic performer. André Luguet was no less a talent
and his against-the-grain pairing with Arletty is surely
Boléro's
most inspired touch - their scenes together at the start of the film (before
the plot convolutions begin giving you a migraine) are the among the funniest
in Boyer's entire oeuvre.
As Luguet's unforgiving girlfriend, Meg Lemonnier has much less of an impact
and whatever thunder she brings to the film is well and truly stolen by Denise
Grey, who plays Luguet's neighbour from Hell (how else does one describe
someone with a pathological liking for Ravel?). In a career that spanned
eighty years, Grey brought her immense talents to many a memorable French
film but here she is at her absolute best, the perfect comedy foil to both
Luguet and Arletty. On the subject of scene-stealing divas, Simone
Signoret appears briefly in the film (as a fashion house employee) right
at the start of her career - it would be another four years before audiences
would notice her, in Marcel Blistène's
Macadam (1946).
Arletty has her costume designer Robert Piguet (one of France's most esteemed
fashion designers, second only to Christian Dior) to thank for Denise Grey
not relegating her to supporting artiste. Sporting a ditsy hat equipped
with Minnie Mouse ears and jewelled horns that make her resemble a lusty
satyr (to say nothing of her stunning, swirly patterned gowns) Arletty would
have had a hard job being eclipsed by an exploding supergiant star let alone
a slightly more mature actress, but in a high spirited imbroglio of this
kind, with talent bursting from just about every crevice and gags being let
off like fireworks at a pyrotechnics convention, the lanky actress was wise
not to take any chances. Arletty is the star of the film and she is the one
we are supposed to notice, and short of plastering her from head to foot
in phosphorescent paint, Piguet could not have done more to get this result.
Strange, though, that the jewel-horned femme fatale look never caught on.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Afflicted with a severe throat infection, Rémi Courmont finds himself
confined to his Parisian apartment but his hopes of a peaceful recuperation
are dashed by his downstairs neighbour, Anne-Marie Houillier. A well-known
fashion designer with an ego to match, the latter has become addicted to
Maurice Ravel's
Bolero and plays the music over and over again on
her record player, much to the annoyance of her stricken neighbour.
As Anne-Marie hosts one of her noisy soirees, Rémi loses his cool
and starts hammering on her ceiling with a big wooden stick. Not long
afterwards, an attractive woman he has never seen before shows up on Rémi's
doorstep and seeks his help as an architect in renovating a farm she has
just acquired.
Introducing herself as Joan of Arc, the woman soon convinces Rémi
she is completely off her rocker, but before he can rid himself of this mad
woman another stranger - this time a man with the physique of a boxer - appears
and begins subjecting him to his jealous husband routine. The situation
is rescued by yet another stranger, who convinces Rémi that the mysterious
woman fixated on farm renovations is in reality an important spy named Catherine.
Who should then show up but Rémi's girlfriend Niquette, who storms
out in disgust on seeing her prospective husband in the arms of another woman.
Not long after the weird entourage has left his apartment Rémi realises
he has been the victim of a practical joke concocted by his downstairs neighbour.
Once he has patched things up with Niquette, Rémi tries to get his
own back by getting his girlfriend to stage a suicide attempt in his neighbour's
apartment. The ruse is soon discovered, but by this time Rémi's
health has taken a turn for the worse and he ends up in bed, attentively
nursed by Catherine and Annie-Marie. By now it is apparent to
Rémi's best friend Paul that Rémi is in love with Catherine,
so he wastes no time in revealing to Niquette how he feels about her.
Stricken with guilt for the muddle she has created, Anne-Marie conspires
with her doctor to unravel the tangled threads and ensure that the farce
has a happy ending. Rémi is far from pleased to discover that
he has contracted an incurable pneumonia...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.