Film Review
Carambolages is quite a rare phenomenon in French cinema
- an enjoyable mélange of black comedy and
farce, seasoned with a generous helping of piquant social
satire. It's a curious potpourri of a film and you
wonder if it is perhaps biting off more than it can chew.
Still, the scattergun comedy mostly pays off, mainly because of the inspired
pairing of comic legend Louis de Funès and Jean-Claude Brialy, the then
darling of the French New Wave trying (perhaps a little too) hard to make a
name for himself in mainstream cinema. The plot is
both chaotic and predictable, a tale of career advancement that owes
something to the Ealing comedy
Kind Hearts and Coronets
(1949), but the humour is unflagging. It is worth watching the film
just to see Brialy manically chasing after an implausibly agile frog.
When he made this film, Louis de Funès was far from being the
national treasure that he was destined to become after his meteoritic
elevation to stardom through the films
Le Gendarme de St. Tropez
(1964) and
Fantômas (1964).
This was one of his pre-break-through triumphs, in which he perfected
the persona for which he is now best known, the mean-spirited executive
who ill-treats everyone around him (think of him as a mix of Alan Sugar
and Caligula) and yet who somehow manages to retain our sympathy as the
world conspires to give him his just deserts. The De
Funès we see in
Carambolages
is the one that French audience would later flock in their millions to
watch in such films as
Les Aventures de Rabbi Jacob
(1973) and
L'Aile ou la cuisse (1976) - a
supremely talented comic performer at the height of his game.
The nominal star of the film is not De Funès, however, but
Jean-Claude Brialy, one of the bright young things who was most
associated with La Nouvelle Vague through his appearances in films
ranging from Claude Chabrol's
Le Beau Serge (1958) to
Jean-Luc Godard's
Une femme est une femme (1961),
via a cameo role in Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959).
Brialy didn't quite have the mainstream appeal of other stars of the
era, notably Alain Delon (who makes a brief but magnificent appearance
at the end of this film), and he seems curiously out of place in
frivolities of this kind. Nevertheless, his natural flair for
comedy sees him through and, with the collusion of screenwriter Michel
Audiard, he turns in one of his most entertaining performances, and
also one of his most chilling. As he ascends the greasy pole,
resorting to every drastic means to achieve his ambitions, Brialy
displays sociopathic tendencies that would make even Delon's Tom Ripley
blush. Some fine supporting contributions from Michel Serrault
and Sophie Daumier (a dead-ringer for Bardot) keep the comedy express
chugging along nicely, and whilst the film doesn't come anywhere near
to achieving its full comic potential, it is an enjoyable romp - even
if most of the gags revolve around people falling from great heights to
their deaths or else being blown up with homemade incendiary
devices. Fortunately, the cute little amphibians manage to get
through this one relatively unscathed.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Paul Martin may be a lowly groundfloor employee of a leisure events company
but he has big ambitions, and you can see why. He has not one woman
but
two to keep - his mistress Solange and his fiancée Danielle
- so he desperately needs a salary increase if he is to stave off bankruptcy.
By marrying the daughter of his boss, Monsieur Brossard, he hopes to replace
him when the latter retires. The news that Brossard intends delaying
his retirement comes as a bitter blow and Paul has to rethink his plans.
Then he has it - he will make his way up the greasy pole by getting rid of
his superiors. First he writes an anonymous letter to the company's
chairman Norbert Charolais accusing his general secretary Beaumanoir of having
an affair with his wife. When this fails to have the intended result
Paul resorts to sending a box of exploding cigars - again to no avail.
Then a stroke of good fortune - Charolais accidentally plunges to his death.
Beaumanoir is next in line for the chairman's job, but he is arrested for
his predecessor's murder by an over-enthusiastic police superintendent.
Soon the path is clear for Paul to achieve his ambition and take the top
job in his company. But just how long can he expect to stay in the
post before one of his underlings tries to dethrone him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.