Film Review
Mainstream French comedies of the 1970s are in a league of their
own. The vast majority are hastily cobbled together nonsense
pieces ('farce' would be too grand a word) intended exclusively for the
less discerning end of the home market. Cheap, tacky and often
very unfunny, few of these films have stood the test of time, although
their unique blend of crass inanity and carefree ineptitude does confer
on them a certain charm.
C'est
pas parce qu'on a rien à dire qu'il faut fermer sa gueule...
(what a hideous title) is among the more watchable of the entries in
this mad onslaught against comic decency, its appalling script amply
redeemed by the spirited contributions from its four lead actors, led
by the incomparable Bernard Blier.
Here, the sainted Blier joins forces with two other popular comic
actors of the time, Michel Serrault and Jean Lefebvre, who form the
unlikeliest of double acts (one that was mercfully never
repeated). Tsilla Chelton (later to be immortalised as the Aunt
from Hell in Étienne Chatiliez's
Tatie
Danielle) completes the quartet as that uniquely French
phenomenon, the female lavatory attendant, humorously referred to as
Madame Pipi. It is this dream foursome that makes this
unimaginably silly comedy so implausibly enjoyable. The gags are,
for the most part, entirely predictable, but Blier and company never
fail to get the laughs as they stumble from one inept comic interlude
to another.
The film was conceived by Gérard Jugnot, Thierry Lhermitte and
Christian Clavier, three members of the
café-théâtre company Splendid, who would soon
become famous through their popular stage plays and films, including
Le Père Noël est une ordure.
The cumbersome title (indicative of much of the film's laboured
attempts at comedy) derives from a catch phrase of the well-known film
dialogist Michel Audiard and translates as "It isn't because you have
nothing to say that you should keep your trap shut." The two
characters Max and Riton are, of course, named after the protagonists
in the French heist classic
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954),
on which the film is (very) loosely based.
For a film that is mostly set in a public convenience (at one of
Paris's mainline train stations), there is surprisingly little in the
way of toilet humour (Dieu merci). Most of the jokes revolve
around mishaps that arise as the hopeless crooks try to knock a hole in
a wall without disturbing the ever-vigilant Madame Pipi, who guards her
toilet domain more diligently than Cerberus does the gates of
Hell. When, finally, the film manages to break out of its
subterranean hole, we are treated to a lazy retread of that old budget
comedy favourite: the misplaced suitcase. Just as the jokes peter
out to nothing in a pointlessly protracted final act the film somehow
matches to disgorge a surprisingly funny punchline.
One sure-fire way to decide whether a comedy has succeeded or not is to
ask yourself: "Would I put myself through all that again?"
In the case of
C'est pas parce
qu'on a rien à dire... the answer is an unequivocal
yes. It's silly, drawn-out and scurrilously patronising
(primarily towards Scotsmen, English lords and those sad evil-eyed
harridans who pounce on you every time you use a public convenience in
France) but none of this prevents it from being fun. Any film
that boasts the combined talents of Bernard Blier and Tsilla Chelton
deserves admission to the pantheon of unmissable French comedies - even
this one.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
The fact that Max and Riton are two of the most inept crooks in France
does not deter criminal mastermind Fano from employing them in his
latest meticulously thought-out nefarious exploit. The scheme is,
after all, totally idiot-proof. All that Max and Riton have to do
is to knock a hole in a toilet cubicle wall at the Gare de l'est in
Paris and help themselves to the stack of cash contained in the safe
behind it. By adopting various disguises, the enterprising crooks
manage to deceive the ever-watchful Madame Pipi as they go about their
business. Alas, Fano's faith in his accomplices proves to be
hopelessly misplaced and it isn't long before the well-planned robbery
starts to go completely awry...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.