Film Review
One of Marc Allegrét's slickest and most inspired comedies is
this hectic ménage à trois farce, a film which
effectively combines the elements of social satire, rom-com and
vaudeville into one heady gag-packed concoction. Those who
believe that Jean Marais is suited only for straight dramatic roles
will be in for a surprise when they watch this film. As the
increasingly desperate lover who tries to keep his prudish
fiancée away from another woman (a young slip of a thing that
has somehow inveigled her way into his attic, presumably making him a
kind of inverted Mr Rochester) Marais is hilarious, far funnier that he
would be in the subsequent
Fantômas films.
The eye-catching Dany Robin is given star billing alongside Marais,
although it is the young Jeanne Moreau who makes the bigger impression,
deftly snatching the rug from underneath Robin's feet at every opportunity. Early in
her career, Moreau had yet to gravitate to the kind of roles that
suited her persona and acting style (that would not come until she
played Catherine in François Truffaut's
Jules
et Jim almost a decade later), but she is a delight in this
film, perfectly suited to play the part of the fastidious snob
Rosie. Assisted by Allegrét's light-as-gossamer directorial touch
and a script that abounds in amusing comic situations,
Moreau, Marais and Robin form an unbeatable combination, transforming
what might have been a humdrum and rather silly comedy into an
entertaining minor classic of French cinema.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2010
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Next Marc Allégret film:
Futures vedettes (1955)
Film Synopsis
Whilst holidaying in Limoges, Madame Valender tries to marry her daughter Julietta
to Hector d'Alpon, a wealthy prince, to make an impression on
everyone. However, Julietta has no interest in money and fame so
she is reluctant to participate in her mother's game. When they
are travelling back to Paris by train, Julietta finds a cigarette
holder belonging to a man who has just left the train. As she
runs after him to return the cigarette holder, the train leaves the
station without her. The man, a lawyer named Maître
Landrecourt, asks her to stay at his house until the morning, after
which she must leave. The next day, Landrecourt has an
appointment with his fiancée, the snobbish Rosie. What
Landrecourt doesn't know is that Julietta has decided to run away from
everything and is there to stay. Unfortunately for Julietta,
Landrecourt intends returning to the house with Rosie, who just happens
to be a good friend of Hector d'Alpon. Rosie has even taken
the liberty of inviting the prince to Landrecourt's house for the
weekend...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.