Film Review
In the dark days of the Nazi Occupation of France, director Jean Boyer could
always be relied upon to raise a smile with his fanciful comedies, as
L'Acrobate
amply demonstrates. Over the previous decade, Boyer had notched up several
hits -
Un mauvais garçon
(1936),
Prends la route (1936),
Circonstances atténuantes
(1939) - and was France's leading director in the musical-comedy genre.
In June 1941 Boyer delivered his first Occupation era comedy, one that marked
the beginning of a long and fruitful collaboration with the comic genius
Fernandel.
After a string of successes in the 1930s, Fernandel had emerged as the most
popular comic actor of his time and starred in no fewer than thirteen films
during the Occupation (including three made by the German-run company Continental).
After
L'Acrobate, Fernandel worked with Boyer on
La Bonne Étoile (1942)
and seven further films, ending with
Relaxe-toi chérie (1964),
the director's swansong.
One of Fernandel's more enjoyable comedies of this era,
L'Acrobate
is an amiable little farce that gives the horse-faced comedian free rein
to lift the spirits of a war-weary audience, aided and abetted by another
comedy legend, Jean Tissier, and a host of less well-known but very capable
performers (Pierre Labry, Jean Brochard, Marcel Carpentier, etc.).
As well as being subjected to innumerable cold showers (this being the way
they cure mental disorders in France, apparently), Fernandel suffers the
ultimate indignity of being humiliated as an unwilling acrobat in a circus
act.
Flying through the air with the greatest of ease is clearly not something
that features prominently on Fernandel's CV, but making us laugh hysterically
as he tumbles from the high wire and struggles to free himself from the safety
net is a fair substitute. Fernandel would gravitate to more serious
fare in later years (gaining respect as a serious actor as he did so), but
here, mid-career, he is at his most accomplished as a comedic performer.
L'Acrobate may not be his best or most memorable film, but it is one
where his gift for making people laugh is put to best use, and in those grim
years of the Occupation this was just the medicine that France needed.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Jean Boyer film:
Romance de Paris (1941)
Film Synopsis
Ernest Sauce is the maître d' of the up-market restaurant
Cochon d'argent. One evening,
when a customer is unable to pay his bill, Ernest drags him to the
nearest police station but is sent away with a flea in his ear when it
is discovered that the man has lost his memory. Ernest
immediately sees a way out of his present worries - by pretending to be
an amnesiac he will be able to rid himself both of his annoying
girlfriend and his pestilential employer. Admitted to an asylum,
Ernest soon sees the downside of his plan and is grateful when a
complete stranger turns up to claim him as a relative...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.