Film Review
The French comedy giant Louis de Funès was at the height of his
powers when he starred in this sidesplitting adaptation of Alec
Coppel's 1959 stage play
The Gazebo.
The play had already enjoyed one successful screen adaptation, a 1959
American film directed by George Marshall and starring Glenn Ford and
Debbie Reynolds, but the French version is far more memorable, on
account of de Funès' unstintingly funny performance, ably
supported by some other comedy legends, Bernard Blier and Michel
Galabru. The icing on the comedy gateau is de Funès'
pairing with Claude Gensac, the actress who played the star's
longsuffering wife in a number of films, most famously the
Gendarmes series.
Jo was directed and scripted
by Jean Girault and Jacques Vilfrid, the same team that had brought us
the
Gendarmes films and
several other Louis de Funès comedies, including
Pouic-Pouic
(1963), the film that had finally made de Funès a
star of French cinema. The plot similarities with Hitchcock's
The Trouble With Harry (1955)
are as apparent as they are in Coppel's original play, but what makes
the film more interesting are its sly references to several familiar
French films, most notably Claude Autant-Lara's
L'Auberge
rouge (1951). Gangster thriller parodies were all the
rage at the time and
Jo
doesn't miss a single opportunity to send up a genre that was still
hugely popular, particularly in France. The result
of this cinematic snatch-and-grab raid is a romp
to savour, one of the slickest and most enjoyable of Louis de
Funès' comedies.
Jo is unusual in that it is a
black comedy, a genre which had traditionally not been popular with
French audiences. Despite this, the film performed reasonably
well at the box office, attracting an audience of 2.5 million - far
better than the 1.6 million achieved by de Funès' previous film,
the lacklustre
Sur un arbre perché
(1971). Both films were massively eclipsed by the third de
Funès comedy to be released in 1971 -
La Folie des grandeurs, another
box office smash from director Gérard Oury, which sold over 5.5
million cinema tickets.
Of the many great film comedies that Louis de Funès made,
Jo is the one that is most overlooked,
although it is hard to see why. The fact that the film is rarely
screened on French television and only made it onto DVD in 2011
suggests it may have been inadvertently deleted from de Funès'
impressive filmography (not so hard to believe given the film title
consists of just two letters). For those lucky devils who have
not seen it,
Jo is a treat
waiting to be discovered. Admittedly, it is not quite in the
league of the great classics
Le Corniaud (1965) and
La Grande vadrouille (1966),
but it is certainly more entertaining, and much funnier, than the
better known
Gendarme and
Fantômas
films. Less fettered by the exigencies of plot than in most of
his other films, de Funès has more freedom to make use of his
legendary talent for improvisation, the upshot being that the best gags
in the film are ones that were clearly not scripted.
Jo's comparative obscurity prevents
it from being legitimately described as a comedy classic, but hopefully
its recent escape onto DVD will soon change that.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Girault film:
Les Charlots font l'Espagne (1972)
Film Synopsis
Under the pretence of researching his next thriller play, writer
Antoine Brisebard consults his lawyer friend Adrien Colas on how to
commit the perfect murder. For some time, Brisebard has been the
victim of an unscrupulous blackmailer, Monsieur Jo, but he has finally
decided to take action to prevent Jo from revealing the scandalous past
of his wife, a well-known actress. One night, Antoine arranges
for Jo to call at his home so that he can shoot him dead. He will
then hide the body in the foundations for a gazebo that his wife has
fortuitously just purchased. With a few glitches along the way,
the scheme goes off as planned. But the next day police Inspector
Ducros notifies the enterprising writer that Jo was killed at his own
home. If that is the case, whose body did Brisebard bury beneath
his wife's gazebo?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.