Film Review
Probably the best of
Jean-Pierre Mocky's anarchic film comedies,
La Grande frousse is a near-perfect
example of the
comédie
policière, a totally unhinged black comedy
that merits its classic status. The film has some striking
similarities with the British Ealing comedies of the 1950s - in
particular
The Ladykillers (1955) -
although its director's intentions are more obviously satirical,
mercilessly poking fun at the establishment and the peculiarities of
French provincial life. Whilst the film is uneven and
occasionally too silly for words, the gags keep coming, with the
ferocity of a hailstone blizzard, some of a hue so black that you are
not sure whether to laugh your entire bronchial apparatus out onto the carpet or draft
an instant letter of disgust to the League Against Extreme Bad Taste in
Film Comedy.
La Grande frousse
just escapes being a comedy masterpiece by the merest skin of its
razor-sharp satirical teeth.
Jean-Pierre Mocky has a particular knack of attracting big name actors
to his films but here he excels himself with a cast of iconic
proportions, one that places serious heavyweight performers such as
Jean-Louis Barrault and Victor Francen, alongside popular comic actors
of the likes of Bourvil and Francis Blanche. At the time,
Bourvil was the most popular comic actor in France and here he gives
one of his most memorable performances as the luckless police inspector
who leaves a trail of devastation (and corpses) wherever he goes, in a
similar vein to Peter Sellers' Inspector Clousseau (who had recently
debuted in the first
Pink Panther
movie). As he confronts a mythical beast from the middle ages (in
truth a sad man in a silly fish head) and singularly fails to unmask
the villain of the piece until most of the dramatis personae have found
their way to the mortuary, Bourvil earns his spurs as a comedy hero,
even if his walk (an irritating skip-cum-gallop) makes him look like an
alien struggling to acclimatise itself to the Earth's gravitional field
strength. Other notable contributions are supplied by Raymond
Rouleau, supremely magisterial (and so obviously the villain...) in
what looks suspiciously like a tongue-in-cheek reprise of his famous
role in
L'Assassinat du Père Noël
(1941), and Jean Poiret, who deserves some kind of award
(and a season ticket for
The Rocky Horror Show)
for his portrayal of the campest
copper (or gingerest gendarme) in Christendom.
La Grand frousse is not only
funny (lethally funny in fact), it is also wonderfully atmospheric, as
chillingly moody as the creepiest horror film, its oppressive
chiaroscuro photography vividly evoking that unmistakable sense of
claustrophobia and alienation you experience on entering
the local post office of
a hermetically closed community that refuses to embrace strangers (i.e. most small towns in
France, and Paris). The legendary cinematographer Eugen
Schüfftan brings to the film the same sense of brooding menace
that he had previously invested in Georges Franju's horror classic
Les Yeux sans visages (1960),
and also something of that film's dark lyrical power. The
location also adds something to the film's distinctive
atmopshere. The film was shot in the typically quaint French town
of Salers, in the Auverne region of south-central France. Not
every member of the local community was happy with this
intrusion. One person, a renowned local witch, is said to have
put a curse on the film. When the film was subsequently
developed, the negative was found to be impregnated with some
inexplicable markings, necessitating that several sequences be reshot.
For its initial release in 1964, the film suffered from poor editing at
the hands of its distributors and was not a great success. When
the rights reverted to the film's author in 1972, Jean-Pierre Mocky
reconstructed the film as he intended it, reinserting some cut
sequences and giving it the title of Jean Ray's novel on which it was
based,
La Cité de l'indicible
peur. On its re-release, the film was far better received
than it had been a decade previously and soon became a cult
favourite. Gérard Calvi's theme song, performed with
élan by René-Louis Lafforgue and repeated endlessly
throughout the film, is one of the catchiest of any French film -
you'll be humming it for weeks after watching the film and may well
require require therapy and/or brain surgery to remove it completely. How does it
go?
"C'est la grande frousse,
c'est la grand peur, prenez bien garde à l'inspecteur, le
dénommé Simon Triquet... Son père était dans la
police, son oncle aussi, même sa nourrice, ah quel destin, ah
quel destin...!" This is Mocky at his scalpel-witted best.
© James Travers 2001
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Next Jean-Pierre Mocky film:
La Bourse et la vie (1966)
Film Synopsis
When a homicidal forger, Mickey-le-Bénédictin, goes on
the run after evading his execution, Inspectors Triquet and Virgus
hasten after him to prevent him from committing any further
crimes. Convinced that the forger will return to the scene of his
former exploits, Triquet heads for the provincial town of Barges, whose
inhabitants are strangely reluctant to cooperate with him. The
town-dwellers live in constant fear of a mythical beast that roams the
area after dark and regard Triquet with a mixture of suspicion and
loathing. In the course of Triquet's haphazard investigation,
people suddenly start to die - first Franqui, who has been spying on
his neighbours, then the pharmacist. Even when Triquet has
exposed the beast of Barges as a fake, the killings continue.
Just what terrible secret does this most insular of French towns
conceal...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.