Film Review
A pleasing little film that deserves to be better known than it is,
the tasty little morsel that is
Cigalon is one of Marcel Pagnol's
more accessible works, a piquant comedy that is both an amiable farce
and a humorous fable - one with a cruel sting in its tail.
Pagnol was inspired to make the film after he met a pompous
restaurateur in La Treille, on the outskirts of Marseille, who took an almost
sadistic pleasure in being rude to his customers. In the wake of the
serious realist drama
Angèle (1934), Pagnol
was keen to make a comedy which would allow him to experiment with a new sound
recording system. Pagnol's first attempt to shoot
Cigalon was not a success.
The sound system was shown to be highly defective and the director had no
option but to shoot the film again, taking the opportunity to recast
most of the roles.
In the film's remount, the principal role of Cigalon, a chef with the
mother of all Napoleon complexes, went to Alexandre Arnaudy, replacing
Henri Poupon who was re-cast as the penniless bon vivant. A
larger-than-life performer, Arnaudy had recently taken the lead in a
stage production of Pagnol's play
Topaze
and would memorably reprise the role in the director's first
screen version of the play in
1936. Perfectly ensconced in the main female role, the formidable
Madame Toffi, is the singer-actress Marguerite Chabert, who played
Honorine in the original 1931 stage production of
Fanny at the Théâtre
de Paris. Pagnol would later give Chabert a small but memorable
role in
Regain (1937).
After the immense success of
Angèle,
the film that established Pagnol as a film director,
Cigalon was to prove a bitter
flop. The critics were unkind to Arnaudy, judging his performance
to be excessive, and audiences failed to warm to Pagnol's idea of
comedy. Totally eclipsed by the string of masterpieces that
Pagnol went on to make afterwards,
Cigalon
has long been considered a minor work in the director's oeuvre, yet it
is not without charm. A kind of 1930s Provençal version of
Fawlty Towers (with a plot
that spookily resembles one episode in the BBC series),
Cigalon contains some of Pagnol's
funniest lines and most colourful characters. If
nothing else, it is the perfect appetiser
for Pagnol's more wholesome cinematic banquets. Bon appetit!
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marcel Pagnol film:
Merlusse (1935)
Film Synopsis
Cigalon is the proud owner of a restaurant in a small town in Haute-Provence
that is reputed to be one of the best in the region. A chef with the
highest opinion of himself, Cigalon regards gastronomy not as a business but as
the most sacred of all the arts, which is why he takes so little effort to
attract and keep his customers. It is with abject horror and unmitigated
contempt that he watches a former laundress named Madame Toffi open a restaurant
next-door to his. Madame Toffi has none of his reverence for food -
she even has the temerity to serve meals to anyone who enters her establishment,
no matter how pig ignorant they may be. Cigalon is appalled, disgusted,
revolted. What is the world coming to when his restaurant remains empty
whilst Madame Toffi's vile eatery is packed to the rafters with the gorging
hoi polloi. Realising that his reputation is at stake, Cigalon must
swallow his pride and start catering for the needs of ordinary paying customers.
Things get off to a good start when a well-dressed man, clearly a man of
breeding and refinement, arrives in a taxi outside his restaurant.
Seizing the moment, Cigalon guides the man into his den of culinary excellence
and lays before him a feast fit for a king. It is with horror that
the chef discovers that his customer hasn't the means to pay for his gargantuan
repast. The sensible thing to do would be to alert the police, but
by doing so Cigalon knows that he will only be signalling his defeat to that
monstrous Toffi woman. No, better to pretend he has been well remunerated
by a customer of distinction than reveal to the world what a fool he has
been...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.