Film Review
L'Auvergnat et l'Autobus is by
far the daftest of the four films that the comic actor Fernand Reynaud
and director Guy Lefranc made together, but it is also the
funniest. It was also, sadly, the last film that Reynaud appeared
in, although he continued to attract large audiences with his one-man
shows right up until his untimely death in 1973. For his
cinematic swansong, Reynaud resorts to an extreme caricature of his
customary gump-like persona, the kind who thinks he can get rich quick
by buying a bus from (of all people) a bus conductor and win a girl's
heart by writing her name on said bus.
The plot is as idiotic as it sounds but Reynaud's unflagging flair for
comedy, together with some pleasing turns from Julien Guiomar, Michel Galabru and
Pierre Tornade, helps to distract us from the film's abject silliness
and makes it an engaging little romp. The French city of
Strasbourg, filmed at the time of year (mid-winter) when it is at its most
enchanting, makes an attractive, almost fairytale-like setting -
indeed it's hard to think of another French film in which Strasbourg
features so prominently (even the famous cathedral gets a joke).
Most of the scripted gags that are not bus-related seem to have an egg
theme - "Ils ont cassé mon Neuf!" - although it's the visual
gags which get the biggest laughs, and buses are a goldmine for this
kind of humour. As great a personality as Fernand Reynaud
undoubtedly was, even he cannot avoid being upstaged by a big red bus.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Guy Lefranc film:
Knock (1951)
Film Synopsis
Julien Brûlebois, a modest farmer from the Auvergne region of
France, is delighted with the news that he has inherited a small
fortune after a relative of his has died. Without delay, he
travels to Strasbourg to collect his inheritance and is soon confronted
with the problem of what to do with his lucky windfall. Seeing
how crowded buses are in the Alsatian capital, he decides to buy a bus,
thinking he will soon get back his investment in ticket revenues.
A bus conductor is happy to take the three million francs that Julien
offers him in exchange for his bus, but Julien is surprised when the
conductor does not show up for work the next day. Not suspecting
for a moment that he has been conned out of his fortune, Julien takes
possession of his bus, confident he will soon be a wealthy man.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.