Film Review
Edouard Molinaro's first collaboration with Louis de Funès on the
1967 hit comedy
Oscar had not been an
amiable experience, either for the director or his leading man. Despite
this, Molinaro allowed himself to be talked by Gaumont into directing a second
film with the temperamental comedy giant, although this was to be their final
collaboration. Like
Oscar,
Hibernatus was an adaptation
of a successful comic stage play and was skilfully adapted by Jean Halain
and Jacques Vilfrid, who scripted many of de Funès's films.
Despite its impressive production values and a superior screenplay,
Hibernatus
only managed to attract an audience of 3.4 million, an impressive result
but way below the audience size that de Funès regularly notched up
in the 1960s and '70s. By this stage in his career, following the phenomenal
success of
Le Gendarme de
Saint-Tropez (1964) and
Fantômas
(1964), Louis de Funès was established as the most popular comic actor
in France, a status he would continue to enjoy for more than another decade.
Hibernatus is a perfect vehicle for de Funès's persona and
style of comedy - once again he is cast as a mean-spirited businessman who
fails to cope with the myriad calamities that he brings on himself.
The talented comedienne Claude Gensac had the honour of playing de Funès's
on-screen wife the previous year in
Le Gendarme se marie (1968),
so it was only fitting that in
Hibernatus she should play his wife
again, once more providing her co-star with the perfect comedy foil.
De Funès managed to persuade the production team to cast his son Olivier
in the role of his son in the film. Olivier de Funès cropped
up in a number of his father's films (
Le Grand Restaurant,
L'Homme orchestre,
Sur un arbre perché),
but evidently he had no real enthusiasm for the career he was pushed into
by his father. Turning his back on acting in 1971, he pursued a career
in aviation and ended up as an airline captain for Air France.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Edouard Molinaro film:
Mon oncle Benjamin (1969)
Film Synopsis
The well-ordered world of Hubert de Tartas, manager of a successful packaging
company, is suddenly turned upside-down when his wife Edmée's grandfather,
Paul Fournier, makes an unexpected return. Sixty-five years after his
ship collided with an iceberg near the North Pole, Fournier's body is discovered
preserved in a block of ice. Professor Loriebat, a world authority
on artificially induced hibernation, takes an immediate interest in the discovery
and succeeds in bringing Fournier back to life, as a spry 25-year-old.
Anxious that his wife's grandfather should not end up as an object of scientific
study, Hubert de Tartas arranges for him to be abducted from the hospital
where he is recuperating and taken to his large family residence. Realising
that Fournier risks being killed by the shock of finding himself in another
age, Hubert and Edmée agree that the safest course is to let him believe
that the year is 1905. Keeping up the deception that Fournier is still
in the Belle Époque proves to a far greater challenge than his well-meaning
descendents imagine, particularly when the Modern Lazarus is convinced that
Hubert is his own philandering father...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.