Film Review
The success of Jacques Becker's
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954)
made the gritty modern crime-thriller the most popular genre at the
French box office in the 1950s, but by the end of the decade it was
beginning to looking a little
dépassé
and two important developments were necessary to ensure the genre's
survival into the following decades. The first was a gradual
shift towards increasing realism, which meant more violence and more
convincing plots. The second was in the opposite direction,
exploiting the genre's tired clichés for comic effect.
Bizarrely, and almost uniquely, Hervé Bromberger's
La Bonne tisane attempts to do both
of these things in the same film, and the results are predictably messy.
The one inescapable flaw of Bromberger's film is that it tries to have
its cake and eat it, i.e. to be a serious, hard-edged gangster film and
yet, at the same time, send the genre up. It's neither
consistently thrilling nor consistently funny, just an oddly muddled
half-way-house that is occasionally shocking and intermittently
amusing. The film courted controversy with its far from
flattering portrayal of life on the wards of state-run French
hospitals. Bedside manner is distinctly lacking as a cynical chief
surgeon (a likeably nasty Raymond Pellegrin) tyrannises both staff and
patients, whilst the nurses whinge endlessly about a profession they
hate and are clearly ill-suited for. Had the film confined itself
to being a grimly tongue-in-cheek portrait of French health care it
might have worked. Alas, its authors had to tack on a tired
gangster plot that runs through every cliché in the book before
collapsing in an ungainly mess. The final shoot out in the
hospital grounds has to be the most idiotically far-fetched scene in
any French crime film, and it's a pity it is so superbly
orchestrated. Imagine a Tarantino-style gore fest tagged on to
the end of
Carry On Doctor and you'll have
some idea how incongruous it is.
The script may be all over the place, the direction generally
uninspired (save one or two excellent scenes with an amusingly
Tarantino-esque lack of restraint), but thankfully the performances are
top-notch and prevent the whole thing ending up as a completely inept
farce. Raymond Pellegrin is as implausibly cast in the role of a
dedicated surgeon as Madeleine Robinson is for the part a gangster's
moll, but because both actors are cast against type their
one-dimensional characters suddenly come to life and give the film a
reason to be. In their delicate hands (aided by a stunning
Estella Blain),
La Bonne tisane
is resuscitated and ends up being both an anti-gangster film and
an anti-hospital drama. Cast as the Ventura-like hoodlum, Bernard
Blier has a solid presence that gives muscle to the gangster half of
the film (something that his co-star Roland Lesaffre patently
lacks). This film marked an important turning point in Blier's
career, granting him passage to those marvellous parodic gangster roles
in such films as
Le Monocle noir (1961) and
Les Tontons flingueurs
(1963).
La Bonne tisane
is a pretty indigestible brew but it provided a badly needed shot in the
arm for France's film policier - a pretty desperate case of kill or
cure. Luckily, the patient survived.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
After spending several years abroad, gangster boss René Leconte
returns to France to resume his criminal exploits. He is welcomed by
his mistress Maine and chauffeur Roger, but soon discovers that
business is not what it was. In his absence, he has acquired a
dangerous rival in Nino, who intends to kill him. When Leconte
keeps a rendezvous with Nino he is ambushed and left for
dead. Miraculously, Leconte survives the attack and manages
to drag himself to a nearby hospital. He is discovered by a
trainee nurse, Thérèse, who brings him in to be treated
by the unsympathetic Dr Augereau. Realising that his employer
risks being picked up by the police, Roger visits the hospital, posing
as a police inspector. Getting Leconte to safety proves to be
much harder than he had imagined...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.