Film Review
For most of the 1970s, director Jean-François Davy devoted
himself to making pornographic films or documentaries related to the
sex industry. Of these the most successful and best known is
Exhibition (1975), which attracted
an audience in France of three million before the censors stepped in
and plastered an X certificate on it.
Chaussette surprise marked a sudden
and unexpected departure for Davy into the more censor-friendly realm
of popular comedy. With a stellar cast that includes two divas of
the French New Wave -
Bernadette Lafont (
La Maman et la putain) and
Anna Karina (
Une femme est une femme,
Alphaville) - it is among
Davy's most exuberant and entertaining films, even if, for the most
part, it is shamelessly silly.
Davy wrote the screenplay in collaboration with the more experienced
writer Jean-Claude Carrière, who is renowned for his many
collaborations with director Luis Buñuel (which included
Le Charme discret de la bourgeoisie (1972)).
Chaussette surprise is as unlikely
a film for Carrière as it is for Davy, and it can't help looking
like a naughty send up of the chaotic lowbrow comedies that were rife
in French cinema in the late 1970s. Michel Galabru, playing a man
more obsessed with the well-being of his television set than his own
state of health, is honoured with the best visual gag - trapped inside his
precious television set in his pyjamas, and Bernadette Lafont does a
good job selling the quiz show concept that would later be recycled as
Qui Veut Gagner Des Millions? (a.k.a.
Who Wants to be A Millionaire?).
Meanwhile, Claude Piéplu is hilarious as the doctor with a
pathological dislike for people who injure themselves in car accidents
and Bernard Le Coq's zany inventions provide a constant stream of weird
visual gags. Marcel Dalio puts in a cameo appearance, right at
the end of his illustrious screen career, and whenever Christine Pascal
turns up she looks as if she is in a completely different (and slightly
superior) film.
Chaussette
surprise dips its toe into the feminist whirlpool of the late
70s and, had more thought gone into the script, it might have made an
effective satire. Instead, the writers and cast are too busy
having fun for this to be anything more than just another silly comedy
from the decade that taste forgot.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After a road accident, Bernard, Raphael and Antoine end up sharing the
same hospital ward. As they create pandemonium from their
hospital beds (helped by Raphael's compulsive habit of inventing
useless gadgets), their wives make the most of their newfound
freedom. One of the wives, Bernadette, ends up on a television quiz
show and stands to win fifty million francs...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.