Film Review
A popular actor through his association with the successful comedy troupe Les Nuls,
Alain Chabat made his directing debut with this fairly unhinged comedy
in which he gets in touch with his inner dog. Despite its fantastic
premise,
Didier is an enjoyable romp that allows Chabat to
play to his comic strengths, doggie style, as he plays a dog reincarnated as a man.
Chabat was rewarded not only with healthy box office returns but also with the César for
Best First Film. Bouyed up by this success, he went on to direct
Astérix et Obélix Mission Cléopâtre (2002),
which turned out to be one of the most successful French comedies ever made.
As well as a strong central performance from Chabat (and the even likeable pooch playing
his canine other self),
Didier also benefits from some lively
contributions from his co-stars, particularly the hugely
talented Jean-Pierre Bacri. The plot may be a tad silly but there
are plenty of comic situations to keep the laughter mill running,
although some of the gags are in appallingly bad taste.
It is perhaps a shame that Chabat religiously avoided getting into any intelligent philosophical
issues, such as the relationship between man and beast and what mankind can learn from
animals. Instead, the dim viewer is fed a vitamin-free diet of burlesque comedy
and expected to swallow it without comment. Nonetheless, this is a very entertaining
film and some of the film's more ambitious sequences are expertly realised.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Alain Chabat film:
Astérix et Obélix Mission Cléopâtre (2002)
Film Synopsis
Football manager Jean-Pierre Costa has his hands full when his friend Annabelle
leaves him to look after her pet Labrador, Didier, whilst she jets off to
Los Angeles to compile a report. This is one imposition he could well
have done without given the news that is about to come his way. Richard
Guerra, the owner of the local football club, calls him up and lets him know
that one of his star players has badly injured himself. If a replacement
cannot be found straightaway Jean-Pierre's job could well be on the line.
It's a well-known fact that trouble always come in threes, so the football
manager's next trauma isn't long in coming.
Waking up one morning Jean-Pierre is surprised to find that Didier has miraculously
been transformed from a dog into a man. What begins as a nightmare
(try teaching a dog to act as a human) soon reveals itself to be the manager's
salvation, as it becomes apparent that Didier, for all his other failings,
turns out to be a remarkably adept football player. Is it possible
that he can be trained up to championship standard within a few weeks, thereby
saving Jean-Pierre's career and his club from relegation? He doesn't
even bother to ask himself the more obvious question: what if Didier suddenly
becomes a dog again...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.