Film Review
Fernandel may be one of the best-loved figures in French cinema but
even his most ardent admirers have to admit that the majority of his
films are mediocre - shallow vehicles to showcase their star performer,
of limited appeal to general film enthusiasts. A few of
Fernandel's films, however, stand out and are not only superlative
examples of French cinema, but also show the horse-faced comic actor at
his best.
L'Armoire volante
is one such film - an inspired black comedy which is almost the perfect
antithesis of a typical Fernandel offering.
The film was directed by Carlo Rim, an established screenwriter who had
only made one previous film,
Simplet (1942), which he
co-directed with Fernandel. Rim was more prolific
as a screenwriter and directed only seven subsequent films,
the most interesting being
La Maison Bonnadieu (1951)
and
Virgile (1953).
Somehow, Rim managed to persuade his
star that the film would only work if he played his character dead
straight - and he was right. It is Fernandel's restrained
performance which makes
L'Armoire
volante so engaging and so irresistibly funny. The
situation Fernandel's character finds himself in is enough to make us
laugh, and it is a treat to see the actor playing against the comedy
instead of (as is more usually the case) over-hyping it for all it is
worth.
L'Armoire volante isn't just
one of Fernandel's best films, it is also one of only a handful of his
films that can legitimately be described a
film d'auteur. Nicolas
Hayer's creepily atmospheric photography and Georges Van Parys's eerie
music both brilliantly underscore the macabre and humorous elements of
the plot. Add to that some wonderful surreal touches and the result
is unlike anything that Fernandel had ever
appeared in up until this time. Unfortunately, black comedy was
not something that French cinema audiences of the period appreciated
and the film was not a great success. Since then, however, the
film's appeal has grown and it has aged far better than most of
Fernandel's films. It may not be quite in the same league as that
other classic black comedy which involves a corpse in a piece of
furniture,
Arsenic and Old Lace (1944),
but it comes pretty close.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Alfred Pic, a hardworking tax inspector, finds himself in a pickle when his
bossy aunt, Madame Lobligeois, goes missing in the most bizarre circumstances.
It begins one cold winter's morning when the indomitable old woman sets off
for Clermont-Ferrand to collect some furniture. In the course of the
gruelling road journey, Madame Lobligeois dies from the cold, just as her
nephew had feared. The deliverymen have no choice but to put the body
of the old woman into a wardrobe in the back of their lorry and resume their
errand. Things go from bad to worse when the lorry is stolen before
the furniture and the corpse can be delivered. Alfred isn't too concerned
by the mysterious disappearance of his unloved relative, until his notary
tells him that he cannot inherit her estate until her body has been discovered.
If Madame Lobligeois was the bane of Alfred's life when she was living, she
is about to become ten times more so now that she is dead. Without
delay, the tax inspector sets out to find the stolen lorry and soon discovers
that it was bought by a young couple. To pay their debts, the latter
were obliged to sell the lorry's contents to a suspicious looking hotelier
named Martinet. Believing that his inheritance is finally within his
grasp, Alfred pays a visit to Martinet's hotel and starts making a search
of all of the wardrobes. In one of these he is rewarded by the discovery
of a dead body. Alas, it is not his aunt but a man - a gangster!
It seems that the wardrobe containing Madame Lobligeois has gone off on its
travels again. In his increasingly desperate pursuit of the errant
piece of furniture, Alfred has cause to wonder if his quest will ever end.
When it does, he is in for a very nasty surprise...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.