Film Review
There is probably no other institution in France that deserves to sent
up more than the Académie française, a self-selecting
body of crusty old pendants and traditionalists who see themselves as
the defenders of the French language but who, in reality, have as much
power as a rundown 12 volt battery. One of the perks of being an
Académien is having to wear a fetching green outfit at the
academy's formal ceremonies, the imaginatively named 'habit
vert'. Not coincidentally, this happens to be the title of a
popular stage play written by Robert de Flers and Gaston Arman de
Caillavet satirising the academy, and also a subsequent film adaptation
directed with a scurrilous sense of fun by Roger Richebé.
What Cardinal Richelieu, the founder of the esteemed Académie,
would have made of this lunatic lampoonery is anyone's guess.
Richelieu was not famous for his sense of humour.
As a director, Richebé was adept in a surprising range of genres
but comedy seemed to be a particular forte of his, evidenced by his
monarchist bashing satire
Monseigneur (1949) and late
Noël-Noël vehicle
La Fugue de monsieur Perle
(1952).
L'Habit vert is
easily the best of Richebé's comedies, and not only because of
the malicious glee it exhibits in ridiculing one of France's most
irrelevant institutions. It is also a deliciously astute social
satire, and in mocking the aristocracy and all those who aspire to be
their social equals (including politicians and artists obsessed with
their social standing) it still has a profound resonance. If the
film were to remade today it would still be highly topical.
L'Habit vert is a film that is
effortlessly funny, a welcome change from the dreary farces and
star-led comedies that tended to dominate mainstream French cinema in
this era. Louis Verneuil's dialogue sparkles with wit and malice,
particularly when it comes from the mouths of such a distinguished
ensemble of comedy actors and borderline eccentrics. In
André Lefaur's Duke of Maulévrier, we have the perfect
personification of the Académie française - a dilapidated
aristocrat who shows his profound devotion to the French language by
marrying a frivolous Rumanian socialite. The vivacious,
man-eating Elvire Popesco is of course the last person we'd expect to
see married to a member of the French Academy, so her presence in this
exalted position makes Lefaur (and by inference the office he holds)
appear even more ridiculous - such a thing could never happen in real
life, surely?
Putting Jules Berry in the same film as Elvire Popesco is about as sane
as throwing a dozen ignited sticks of dynamite into a burning can of
petrol, but somehow Richebé gets away with this supreme act of
folly and we end up with a lively fireworks display rather than a
raging conflagration. Clearly there was no shortage of ham in the
1930s, judging by how much of the stuff Berry and Popesco manage to
fling at the camera lens in the course of this film. Never the
most subtle of actors, Berry was outrageous whenever he was allowed to
get his teeth into a meaty comedy role, and here he is so over the top
that you wonder how he managed to avoid ending up in orbit around the
planet Neptune. Watching Berry and Popesco knock the comedy
stuffing out of each other beats sumo wrestling any day.
Meg Lemonnier and Victor Boucher bring a touch of class (and some badly
needed sobriety) to the proceedings, and Pierre Larquey's presence as
an Académicien who is more dust than flesh and blood is very
welcome, the icing on a decidedly rich and fruity
gâteau. We can take it as read that Roger
Richebé was never admitted to the hallowed ranks of the
Académie française, although he did the French nation an
immense service by showing what a pointless and preposterous
institution this club for the pathologically self-important is.
It's a film that gives a whole new meaning to the phrase 'kicking the
habit'.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The Duke of Maulévrier belongs to one of the oldest families in
France, so it is right and proper that he should be a member of the
Académie française, the noblest of France's
institutions. His wife, the Duchess, is a free-spirited Rumanian
who has a tendency to welcome guests at the Duke's ancestral home with
more enthusiasm than is becoming to a personage of her status -
especially so in the case of the social climbing pianist
Parmeline. It is through the latter that the Duchess meets Count
Hubert de Latour-Latour, a man who is as proud of his noble ancestry as
the Duke. The Count cannot help falling for the exotic charms of
the Duchess and when the two are found in an uncompromising position by
the Duke some quick thinking is required to avoid a scandal. The
Duchess saves her face and her honour by explaining that the Count was
merely entreating her to ask her husband to find him a position in the
Institut de France. As it so happens, there is a vacancy at the
Académie française and the Duke sees that the Count, a
man who can trace his ancestors back several hundred years, would be
the ideal candidate. The election proves to be a formality and in
due course Count Hubert is elected to France's most revered
institution...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.