Film Review
Eddie Constantine stars in this somewhat lacklustre pastiche of
film noir and
American-style action/adventure, a formula that was hugely popular in France in the 1950s.
Having played the redoubtable FBI agent Lemmy Caution in a dozen or so similar films,
Eddie Constantine became one of the biggest stars in French cinema, much loved on account
of his smooth American charm with accent to match. These films are very much a product
of their time, intended to serve an intense craving for all things American, and consequently
now appear very dated and rather shallow.
Watching
Ces dames préfèrent le mambo you'd be mistaken
for thinking you had tuned into an episode of the “Eddie Constantine show”
- so strong is the lead actor's presence in the film that everything else
(including the magnificent Lino Ventura) appears superfluous. Like most of the films
in this series, it is best appreciated as a well-intended parody of the B-movie genre,
indeed a parody of itself. The most enjoyable part of this film is its last few
scenes, culminating with a wonderfully camp send-up of the Lemmy Caution series.
Pigez?
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Bernard Borderie film:
Le Gorille vous salue bien (1958)
Film Synopsis
Seafarer Burt Brickford winds up in a South American port where he attracts
the attention of a stranger, Pérez, who offers to give him a passport
in return for captaining a yacht on a pleasure trip to the Caribbean.
At odds with the American authorities, Burt is badly in need of a new passport
and so he gladly accepts the offer. The yacht in question belongs to
the millionaire Henery Legrand and his passengers are a suspicious-looking
bunch that include three young women, Constance, Marina and Claire, the latter
of whom is mixed up with some gangsters. When he discovers explosives
on board the yacht Burt is told that his passengers intend recovering the
lost treasure aboard a sunken galleon. In fact this is just another
smoke screen to conceal the real purpose for the expedition...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.