Film Review
Riding high on the success of his Lemmy Caution films -
La Môme vert-de-gris
(1953),
Cet homme est dangereux
(1953),
Les Femmes s'en
balancent (1954) - Eddie Constantine (America's most popular import
to France in the 1950s) is up to his usual tricks in this predictably anodyne
thriller, one which sees him team up with his own daughter Tanya (the first
of only five film appearances) and popular singer-turned actress Juliette
Gréco (attractively made up as a Eurasian beauty).
The film was directed with little sign of flair by Raoul André, a
purveyor of such low-grade comedies as
Les Pépées font
la loi (1955) and
Ces messieurs de la famille
(1967). André was unlikely ever to be mistaken for a world-class
auteur but his films found favour with a mainstream French cinema audience
in their time, although they are (rightly) forgotten today.
L'Homme et l'Enfant is by no means the most offensive of Eddie Constantine's
screen outings but it is about as vacuous, formulaic and cliché-ridden
as a second rate thriller of this era could be. With a ready smile and
even readier right fist, the charismatic, wise-cracking Constantine does at
least have what it takes to salvage even this unimaginative pot-boiler.
In this he is very nearly (but not quite) thwarted by a truly hideous theme
song, a French version of Wayne Shanklin's
Little Boy and the Old Man
(later released as a hit single) and some distracting digressions into tepid
and slightly toe-curling erotica.
Engaged as an assistant director on this film was Claude Pinoteau, who would
go on to have a fairly distinguished career as a film director from the early
1970s, winning praise for his slick thriller
Le Silencieux (1973) and touching
inter-generational drama
La Gifle
(1974), before scoring a notable hit with his coming-of-age comedy-drama
La Boum (1980).
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After WWII, American bachelor and former GI Fred Barker settles in France
with his adopted daughter Cathy and manages a perfume factory owned by his
friend Carlo Ferell, whose life he saved during the war. One day, Fred
is visited by a complete stranger, Félix Mercier, who informs him that
Cathy has been kidnapped and will only be returned to him after he has found
his missing granddaughter, a 17-year-old named Hélène.
The stranger insists that Hélène has been abducted, a victim
of a white slave operation centred around Ferell's factory. When Fred
finds drugs concealed in a bottle of perfume, he has his first clue to Hélène's
whereabouts...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.