Film Review
Henri Garat's short but high profile career as a singer and screen actor
was almost over by the time he appeared in
Ça... c'est du sport
- evidenced by the fact that he only received second billing after the film's
real star, Pierre Larquey. The prematurely aged Larquey may not have
had Garat's good looks and vocal talents but, the epitome of a screen Monsieur
Tout-le-monde, he was far more popular with cinema audiences and, throughout
the 30s and 40s, he was one of the busiest screen actors in France. Garat's
decline had been even swifter than Larquey's ascent, hastened by his addiction
to drugs, alcohol, women and gambling - a lifestyle that was too fast and
extravagant for any film star. In the only film he made for director
René Pujol, Garat is a sorry shadow of his former self, playing third
fiddle to Larquey and another incomparable comic performer, Rellys.
Even though Garat gets all the glitzy musical numbers, the film more rightly
belongs to Larquey and Rellys, who pretty well steal the film with a superb
double act that they had already established in a previous Pujol film,
Titin des Martigues
(1938).
Ça... c'est du sport is a made-to-measure film
for Pierre Larquey, up to his usual scene-stealing antics as a debt collector
who is infatuated with a monstrously demanding Marguerite Pierry (another
great comedy performer) and ends up being manoeuvred into a 'mariage blanc'
with a black woman. Larquey's increasingly desperate attempts to meet
Pierry's unreasonable demands provide the bulk of the humour, with the ever-resourceful
Rellys supplying further comedy ammunition as he goes 'over the top', as
the plot frequently demands. 'How this figure haunts me!' Larquey sighs
on being lumbered with a tax bill equivalent to the amount he had already
been forced to steal from his employer to give to Pierry and then steal back
again to avoid going to prison. No matter how ludicrous the situation,
Pierre Larquey always makes it seem that we have all been there.
Implausible as it may seen, the lovely Suzanne Dehelly (another Pujol regular)
is the girl that the pug-ugly Rellys has set his heart on, leaving the virtually
overlooked Garat with the 'consolation prize' of Jany Briand, an ingénue
dazzling in what was, inexplicably, her one and only film appearance.
Ça... c'est du sport is hardly René Pujol's best film
- Henri Garat's presence is an unwelcome intrusion that takes away more than
it adds to the inspired Larquey-Rellys double act, and the plot loses its
head of steam just around the midway point. Still, it has that infectious
sense of anarchic fun that permeates virtually all of Pujol's comedies, and
what the film lacks in the way of a coherent plot it more than makes up with
its generous slew of gags, all admirably served by some of the greatest comedy
performers in France at the time. It's worth noting, en passant,
that Gilles Grangier was the assistant director on this film - he would
take up the baton after Pujol's death and become a notable
habitué of this kind of popular entertainment.
Larquey and Pierry would repeat their
fearsome mating ritual in a later René Pujol film,
Faut ce qu'il faut (1946),
reminding us that love is more a combative sport than a union of compatible
souls - not something for the faint-hearted or chronically sane.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Monsieur Trapon, a modest debt collector, wants to marry Madame Lavator,
a cloakroom attendant in a nightclub, but she insists that she will not marry
until her two daughters, Ernestine and Anna, have both found suitable husbands.
It so happens that Ernestine has a willing suitor in the lowly barman Falloche,
but Madame Lavator will only sanction the engagement if he gives her 30,000
francs. Reluctantly, Trapon lends Falloche the money ('borrowing' it
from his employer), but then Madame Lavator imposes her second condition:
Anna must be married before she can agree to give Ernestine away. Falloche's
friend Henri Le Gall, an aspiring cabaret artist, comes to the rescue: Anna
is just the girl he likes. Monsieur Trapon then inherits a shop from
a rich uncle, but in order to claim his inheritance he must pay 30,000 in
tax and marry his uncle's niece. Yvonne Romulus. Trapon's plans to
wed the impossible-to-please Madame Lavator now appear well and truly scuppered...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.