Film Review
In the course of his busy career, Jean-Marie Poiré directed many silly comedies, but few are sillier
than this boisterous send up of the American action thriller.
The jokes are mostly predictable, the plot is a shambolic mess and the characterisation is so lacking
in substance that it is almost invisible to the naked eye. Fortunately, there's just about
enough zip to hold the whole thing together and prevent a mass stampede towards the cinema exit.
L'Opération Corned-Beef is a somewhat less appealing prospect than
Poiré's previous comedies
Le Père Noël est une ordure (1982)
and
Papy fait de la résistance (1983),
which have what this film badly lacks - a well-constructed narrative to support
all the ludicrous comic escapades.
On the plus side, the action stunts are extremely well choreographed (eat your
heart out Belmondo), and give rise to some of the film's best sight gags.
The two lead actors Christian Clavier and Jean Reno make a highly effective
chalk-and-cheese double act, of the kind that often featured in
popular French comedies of this era. Realising that the Clavier-Reno
pairing is the best thing about this film, Poiré would subsequently
re-deploy it, along with Valérie Lemercier, in a later film - the 1993 comedy
classic
Les
Visiteurs.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Marie Poiré film:
Les Visiteurs (1993)
Film Synopsis
Philippe Boulier, code name “Le Squale” is an agent in the French secret service.
He is recalled from South America to help dismantle an arms trafficking network in France,
“Operation Corned Beef”. Things start out simply enough - Boulier merely
has to spy on the key suspect, the Colombian Zargas, at a consulate in Paris. Then
Jean-Jacques enters the frame - a naïve company psychologist, whose mistress just
happens to be Boulier's fiancé…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.