Film Review
An incomparable star of French cinema for four decades, having appeared in
over 150 films, the legendary comic actor Fernandel bowed out gracefully
in
Heureux qui comme Ulysse, a somewhat mawkish but nonetheless amiable
comedy-drama that recalls his earlier great film,
La Vache et le prisonnier
(1959). The film was based on an American novel published a few years
earlier,
The Homecoming by Marlena Frick, and directed by a virtual
unknown, Henri Colpi.
As a film editor, Colpi had worked on some important films of the 1950s and
'60s, most notably Alain Resnais's
Hiroshima mon amour (1959)
and
L'Année dernière
à Marienbad (1961), turning to directing late in his career.
Fernandel's swansong was the fourth of five features he directed for the
cinema; he was more prolific in French television, helming such popular serials
as
Thibaud (1969) and
L'Île mystérieuse (1973).
With its picturesque Provençal setting, sedate pace and fairly naturalistic
performances,
Heureux qui comme Ulysse is strongly evocative of the
films that Fernandel made with director Marcel Pagnol at the start of his
career, understated rural melodramas such as
Angèle
(1934) and
Regain (1937). This
impression is reinforced by the welcome presence of another Pagnol regular,
Rellys, a likeable comic actor who famously played Ugolin in the original
Manon des sources (1952).
Rellys and Fernandel worked together several times before this, on such films
as
Honoré de Marseille
(1956) and
Crésus (1960).
Fernandel may be looking a little long in the tooth (at the time he was only
66), be still hasn't lost that beguiling aura of childhood innocence that
accompanied him throughout his career, nor his ability to engage with our
emotions, making us laugh or weep, as and when the occasion arises.
As he did so marvellously on his earlier Henri Verneuil film, the horse-faced
actor seems to develop an incredibly close rapport with his non-human co-star,
this time a horse that is way past its best. It is this relationship,
a kinship of two souls nearing the end of their mortal existence, that makes
the film so moving and prevents it from drowning in sentimentality.
It is so easy to read into the film a sobering allegory on the way that contemporary
society treats its elderly citizens when they are no longer deemed to be
of any value. The title song, sung by Georges Brassens and composed
by Georges Delerue, adds greatly to the film's haunting wistfulness.
Through its authentic performances, sensitively written script and stunning
location photography,
Heureux qui comme Ulysse now impresses as one
of the better films that Fernandel lent his talents to in his final decade,
and arguably one of the finest of his career. At the time of its first
release in July 1970, however, it was considered a failure as it only attracted
an audience of one million, far below what previous Fernandel films regularly
achieved. After making this film, the actor was to reprise one of his
best-known roles in
Don Camillo et ses Contestataires, but filming
had barely got under way when he had to give up work, incapacitated by a
cancer illness that had been troubling him for some time. Seven months
after the release of his final film, Fernandel passed away, on 26th February
1971.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Antonin is an ageing farmhand who leads a peaceful existence in a small village
in Provence. One day, his employer gives him an errand that he would
rather not discharge - to take his old farm horse Ulysse to Arles, to end
his days in the bullring. The prospect that his old friend should meet
with such a brutal and ignominious death, on the end of a picador's lance,
is more than Antonin can bear. He has spent over twenty-five years
attending to the animal and in that time they have become the closest of
friends. If only he had the money, he would buy the horse and keep
him for himself. But, alas, Antonin is a poor man and so the best he
can do is to take Ulysse to Carmargue and see what turns up. Arriving
in Arles, the old man is witness to the horrors of the bullring and cannot
bear that his treasured Ulysse should suffer the same fate. Now he
sees that there is only one course open to him: he must let the old horse
go free, to live out its remaining days in peace...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.