Film Review
Coming hot on the heels of Michel Hazanavicius's full-bodied
spy-thriller spoof
OSS 117: Rio ne répond plus
(2009),
Imogène McCarthery
is a forlorn sojourn into similar territory, a lesser film which looks
as if it has missed the boat and knows it. On paper, the film has
a lot going for it. It was written and directed by Alexandre
Charlot and Franck Magnier, two of the writers on the phenomenally
successful French satirical TV series
Les
Guignols de L'info (the French version of the UK's
Spitting Image), who also scripted
the hit film comedy
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis
(2008). The film stars Catherine Frot, one of the most talented
and likeable comedic actresses in French cinema today, partnered with
three other notable performers, Lambert Wilson, Michel Aumont and
Danièle Lebrun. With such a bevy of talent, you'd be
forgiven for thinking that the film could hardly fail to be a comic
masterpiece. Alas, for their directing debut, Charlot and Magnier
appear to have run slap bang into a creative impasse and the film falls way short of
our expectations. There are some good points - the film is
attractively photographed, it is well-acted and occasionally
funny (admittedly nowhere near as sharp and funny as
Les Guignols), but overall
it is just too predictable to make much of an impact.
This is a shame because the story concept has great potential.
The heroine of the film - a feisty English-hating Scottish ultra-nationalist
who becomes the unlikeliest of secret agents - was
created by the popular writer Charles Exbrayat and featured in seven of
his novels, including
Ne vous fâchez pas Imogène, on which the film is based. Imogène's exploits made it onto French
television in the early 1990s, in a well-liked series in which she was
magnificently portrayed by Dominique Lavanant (
Je suis un sacré
phénomène. Et je m'appelle Imogène...).
One of the problems with Charlot and Magnier's film is that
Catherine Frot's portrayal of Imogène is
virtually indistinguishable from her previous amateur sleuth creation,
Prudence Beresford in Pascal Thomas's Agatha Christie romps:
Mon petit doigt m'a dit (2005)
and
Le Crime est notre affaire
(2008) - to the extent that whenever she gets into a sticky situation
you half expect André Dussollier to come rushing to her
rescue. It is disappointing that an actress of Frot's ability
could not delineate the two roles better, although, to be fair, her
well-honed comedic skills are ultimately what save the film.
Whilst it may offer few surprises,
Imogène
McCarthery is an effective pastiche of the kind of 1960s British
spy thrillers that have now (contrary to logic and good taste) become
cult classics. If Michel Hazanavicius's OSS 117 films were
inspired by big screen offerings such as the early James Bond movies,
Charlot and Magnier's film has a more modest scope, sending up the kind
of creative nonsense that was served up to undiscriminating television
audiences in the '60s. Fans of
The
Avengers and
Department S
will get far more out of this film than those whose exposure to espionage
fantasy is limited to the bigger budget exploits of 007 and Harry
Palmer. On the plus side, the film is somewhat less
self-conscious than the much-vaunted Hazanavicius spy romps and is a
little kinder to the genre it pokes fun at, although some would argue
that the bean-feast of self-referential Mickey-taking in the OSS 117 films is
infinitely preferable to the lukewarm banalities that Charlot and
Magnier offer up from the back of their kebab van.
Imogène McCarthery is
unlikely to become a comedy classic but it somehow manages to be an
entertaining piece of ephemera, memorable if only for the one hilarious
scene in which Catherine Frot beats a Soviet agent to death with an
oar, re-enacting the famous shower scene from Hitchcock's
Psycho
with sufficient zeal to make you wonder if she isn't genetically linked
to Norman Bates. Mercifully, we don't see the results of Frot's
homicidal outburst, but we pity her agent...
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Imogène McCarthery is proud of her Scottish ancestry, almost
fanatically so. Rugby, bagpipes and malt whisky are her three
main passions, along with cultivating an undying hatred for the
English. Secretary to the Admiralty in London, she is summoned to
the office of her boss, Sir Woolish, expecting to be fired after
committing a minor misdemeanour. Instead, she is charged with an
important matter of state: to deliver the blueprints for a new aircraft
to, of all places, her home village in Scotland. On the train
journey up to Scotland, she shares a compartment with three of her
compatriots, not suspecting for a moment that they might be enemy
agents...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.