Film Review
Sacha Guitry's second sound film,
Bonne Chance, makes a stark contrast to his first,
Pasteur (a sober biography
of the life of Louis Pasteur), and is far more typical of his subsequent films.
This is a playful and sometimes irresistibly funny romantic comedy, very much in the style
of Ernst Lubitsch's early American films. The only things preventing it from
being a French cinema classic are the lacklustre direction and some excruciating longueurs
(one of which involves Guitry performing some rather pointless and seemingly
interminable longhand calculations in what looks like an Open University outtake).
Guitry stars in the film along side his real-life wife, Jacqueline Delubac, who would
feature in many of his later films.
Bonne Chance was released simultaneously with
Pasteur, with the result that
it was largely overshadowed by the latter film, which received far greater exposure and
critical acclaim. The film was remade by RKO in 1940 as
Lucky Partners, directed
by Lewis Milestone, an inferior work which lacks the charm and sparkling wit of the original.
© James Travers 2003
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Sacha Guitry film:
Pasteur (1935)
Film Synopsis
Marie Muscat is a young and attractive laundress who lives with her mother
in a modest Parisian apartment. She is engaged to marry Prosper, a
fairly dim young man who is away at the moment on his military training.
Marie was manoeuvred into the engagement by her mother, who has decided it
is high time her daughter found herself a husband. In fact, Marie is
more strongly attracted to one of her neighbours, a forty-something artist
named Claude who ekes out a modest existence by selling his uninspired daubings.
One day, Claude wishes Marie 'Good Luck' and, believing it to be a good omen,
the young woman buys a lottery ticket. She tells the artist that if
she wins she will give half of the money to him. Fate smiles on Marie
and she wins the jackpot - two million francs! - but Claude has reservations
about taking his share of the winnings. Instead, he persuades Marie
to accompany him on a long voyage. They must return within two weeks,
because this is when Marie's marriage to Prosper is due to take place.
The holiday gives Claude the chance to squander his earnings on Marie, and
she in return brings him good fortune in the casino when they arrive in Monte
Carlo. Knowing that he cannot wed Marie, Claude considers adopting
her - and then he has another stroke of good fortune. Prosper has found
himself another woman and Marie is free to marry who she chooses!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.