Film Review
We should be grateful that Darry Cowl directed only
one film. Being a popular
comedian doesn't mean you can't be a great director as well - Charlie
Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Mel Brooks (to name just three) proved that
funny men can also make perfectly competent filmmakers - but in most
cases you can't help wishing the clown had stuck to the day job.
Cowl definitely belongs in the latter camp.
Jaloux comme un tigre is exactly
the kind of film you would expect Cowl to direct - a scattergun mess of
a film which goes to extraordinary lengths to be funny but isn't
remotely (much like Cowl himself). It feels like a throwback to
the middle ages, where convicted criminals would be humiliated and
savagely mutilated for public amusement. In this instance, it is
an ensemble of France's leading comic actors who get butchered, and
amusement is most definitely not the 'mot juste'. Jean Poiret,
Michel Serrault, Dany Saval, Francis Blanche, Jean Yanne, Jean Richard,
Michael Lonsdale... One by one, the sadistic Cowl lures them into
his demonic machine and slaughters them before our eyes. It's the
thespian equivalent of Halal butchery, only crueller, more degrading,
not only for the victims but also for the on-looker. From the
most anodyne of pretexts (a jealous husband trying to prove to his wife
that he loves her) Cowl concocts an overactive comedy atrocity that is
excruciating to sit through. You cannot possibly know the meaning
of the word 'suffering' until you have endured every life-sapping
microsecond of this cinematic horrror.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Henri and Sophie would seem to be the ideal couple, and they would be
if it were not for the fact that Henri is pathologically jealous.
Fearing that his wife may be cheating on him, Henri constantly spies on
her every move, which makes it hard for him to hold down a job.
Sophie resents her husband's lack of faith in her, but because they are
so deeply in love Henri's obsession poses no real threat to their
union. Then, one day, Henri's boss, an inveterate Don Juan, meets
Sophie at a tennis club. Now Henri will soon have good reason to
be a jealous...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.