Film Review
La Grande vadrouille
represents the absolute pinnacle of mainstream French comedy in the
1960s, a big budget period extravaganza that brought together three of
the most popular comic actors of the era - Bourvil, Louis de
Funès and Terry-Thomas - and could hardly help being a runaway
success.
Attracting an audience of 17.3 million in France, the
film held onto its record as the most successful French film for forty
years, until Dany Boon's
Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis stole
its top-of-the-poll position in 2008 with an audience of 20.5
million. A classic in the true sense of the word,
La Grande vadrouille (released in
the US as
Don't Look Now... We're
Being Shot At!) regularly achieves high audiences whenever it is
screened on French television and remains one of the best loved and
most watched of all French film comedies. And it is not hard to
see just why that is.
What is most striking about
La
Grande vadrouille is how good it looks. Compared with most French
comedies of this era, which tended to be low budget, studio-bound
productions that were little more than badly filmed sitcoms, this one
has the feel of a genuine blockbuster, beautifully photographed by
Claude Renoir (nephew of the famous director Jean Renoir), with an
attention to period detail that rivalled many a contemporary Hollywood
war film.
Full-blown action-adventure comedy was a rarity in
France, even as late as the 1960s, so
La
Grande vadrouille was something of a trailblazer, setting high
standards for subsequent comedies and generally raising the bar for
mainstream French film cinema in general. This was an era when
cinema was struggling hard to compete with television, and so bigger
budgets, bigger casts and grander scenarios were very much the order of
the day. Who would pay to watch a dreary sitcom at the cinema
when they could watch the same for free on television in the comfort of
their own homes? The phenomenal success of
La Grande vadrouille must have come
as a huge morale boost to an industry that had good reason to think its
days were numbered.
La Grande vadrouille may have
broken the mould with its lavish production values and masterfully
choreographed set-piece action sequences, but it was not the first
French comedy to make light of France's troubled period of Nazi
Occupation. It had been a decade since agent provocateur Claude
Autant-Lara had shown the lighter side of living under the Fascist
jackboot in
La Traversée de Paris
(1956), and since there had been a spate of (generally mediocre)
wartime comedies, ranging from Christian-Jaque's irreverent
Babette s'en va-t-en guerre
(1959) to Jean Renoir's more sophisticated
Le Caporal épinglé
(1962).
La Grande vadrouille
was not the first film to mock the Nazis but it does occasionally risk
getting snagged on the thorns of controversy with its coded allusions
to collaboration and attentism. More signficantly, it was the
first comedy on WWII to be shown at cinemas in Germany. The
success of the film may even have been a factor in the French nation
growing to accept the grim realities of the Occupation in the decade
which followed its release.
Unlike many subsequent WWII comedies - most notably Jean-Marie
Poiré's
Papy fait de la résistance
(1983) -
La Grande vadrouille
has no need to resort to facile national stereotypes (of the tiresome
'Allo, 'Allo ilk) to get the
laughs. In the best tradition of comedy, the humour lies not in
the characters, but in the absurd situations they get themselves into -
and there is no end of absurd situations in this film. From a
creepily homoerotic encounter in a Turkish baths to a spectacular chase
sequence in which our heroes evade capture with (of all things)
pumpkins,
La Grande vadrouille
takes us on the most surreal flights of fancy but never seems to lose
its grip on reality.
Not only is it a superb comedy, it is also a
pretty respectable action war film, one of the best to have been made
in France in the 1960s.
La Grande vadrouille was
directed (with unstinting panache) by Gérard Oury, a former
actor who, having directed a few lacklustre genre films, notched up his first
box office triumph with
Le Corniaud (1965), another
ballsy action-comedy featuring Bourvil and Louis de Funès.
Oury was clearly far more influenced by the Hollywood big guns than his
New Wave contemporaries, and he had an innate flair for making splashy
comedies that the public would want to see (time and again) in their
millions, even if some of his films ventured into slightly iffy
territory (racial prejudice, international terrorism, etc.).
Oury's subsequent box office hits include:
Le
Cerveau (1969),
La Folie des grandeurs (1971)
and
Les Aventures de Rabbi Jacob
(1973), all of which now occupy an important place alongside
La Grande vadrouille and
Le Corniaud in the pantheon of
French film comedy.
Although the Bourvil-De Funès double act had only been
established in
Le Corniaud,
the two actors had appeared together in earlier films, some years
before De Funès had his big breakthrough and was still relegated
to minor supporting roles. Their first on-screen rencontre was in
Gilles Grangier's
Poisson d'avril (1954) and they
had shared a memorable scene in
La
Traversée de Paris.
La Grande vadrouille was the
perfect vehicle for both comic actors, allowing them to spar off one
another brilliantly with their wildly contrasting comic personas.
The easy-going, avuncular Bourvil makes an effective contrast with the
small-minded petit bourgeois De Funès, and the bitter class
friction that underpins their characters' interplay as they try to cope
with the worst the Wehrmacht has to throw at them is one of the
funniest aspects of the film. A consummate perfectionist,
De Funès spent three months rehearsing the sequence in which he
conducts an orchestra through a recital of Berlioz's
Damnation de Faust. He not
only took lessons from a professional conductor but spent whole days
refining his movements in front of a mirror; his performance was so
convincing that, after a flawless take, the musicians he was conducting
spontaneously responded with the warmest of ovations.
The sequence which best characterises the edgy De Funès-Bourvil
relationship is the one in which the former cons the latter into giving
him a piggyback ride (an apt class metaphor if ever there was
one). Incredibly, this scene was not scripted but was improvised
by the two actors during the shoot. One of the most enduring
images of the film, the memorable shot of De Funès sitting
triumphantly astride Bourvil's shoulders was used in posters to promote
the film and seems to presage the former actor's ascendancy over the
latter, through his later cinematic successes. Having become firm
friends by this stage, De Funès and Bourvil were keen to work
together on a third film, but this was not to be. Bourvil died
from cancer in 1970 before he could partner De Funès in
La Folie des grandeurs and had to
be replaced by Yves Montand. Just before his death, Bourvil did
get to team up once more with the film's other comic genius,
Terry-Thomas, in Marcel Camus's similarly themed but far less
impressive
Le Mur de l'Atlantique (1970).
It was on
La Grande vadrouille
that Danièle Thompson, the daughter of director Gérard
Oury, made her screenwriting debut. Thompson would work on all of
Oury's subsequent films and later become a director in her own right,
making her directorial debut with
La Bûche, one of the most
popular films of 1999. This is not the film's only family
connection. Its well-oiled scenario appears to have been inspired
by Robert Stevenson's American wartime drama
Joan of Paris (1942), which starred
none other than Michèle Morgan, Gérard Oury's partner at
the time. Morgan's son Mike Marshall (the half-brother of
actress-director Tonie Marshall) appears in the film, in the role of
the Canadian airman Alan McIntosh.
La Grand vadrouille is one of
those remarkable films you can watch again and again, and never grow
tried of, and, unlike most French comedies, it is readily accessible to
a non-French audience (it helps that a large chunk of the dialogue is
in English!). The gags are not crowbarred into the narrative, as
is sadly so often the case with action comedies these days, but appear
to spring naturally from the plot situations, and this is probably why the
film is so unrelentingly funny and has stood the test of time so well -
the jokes are spontaneous and mostly take us by surprise. From
hilarious
malentendus to
outright slapstick of the Mack Sennett variety,
La Grand vadrouille covers
practically the entire spectrum of comedy, and still manages to be an
adrenaline-pumping action romp. It may have lost its claim to be
the film that drew the largest cinema audience in France but it will be
a very, very long time before it ceases to be the most fondly regarded
of French comedies.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Gérard Oury film:
Le Cerveau (1969)
Film Synopsis
In 1941, World War II has hardly begun when an English aeroplane is shot
down whilst flying over Nazi occupied France. Fortunately, the three
airmen who bail out manage to parachute to safety in the heart of Paris.
Peter Cunningham's fall is arrested by some scaffolding - he is then rescued
by Augustin Bouvet, a good-natured painter and decorator. Alan MacIntosh
comes to land on top of the Paris Opéra just as the esteemed conductor
Stanislas Lefort is rehearsing his next concert. Sir Reginald, known
as Big Moustache because of his facial adornments, is the unluckiest of the
three - he drops right into the otter enclosure of a zoo. The airmen's
first thought is to find a safe hiding place before they are picked up by
the French police or German soldiers.
Like many of their countrymen, Augustin and Stanislas are reluctant to do
anything that might antagonise their German overlords, but they agree to
shelter the airmen and keep a secret rendezvous at the Turkish Baths with
Sir Reginald. Before they know it, the painter and the conductor are
caught up in a desperate scheme to smuggle the three aviators across France
to the Free Zone in the south. In this, they are assisted by a plucky
young woman named Ginette, who provides a temporary refuge for Peter in her
father's puppet booth. Not long after boarding a southbound train,
Peter is arrested, but is soon rescued by his friends. They make a
quick get-away in a stolen car and end up being sheltered by a Nazi-hating
nun, Sister Marie-Odile. So far, so good.
Now comes the daring part of the enterprise. By hiding themselves in
empty barrels, the fugitives gamble that they will be transported across
the Demarcation Line without anyone knowing. Unfortunately, the gamble
does not pay off. Instead, the barrels end up being delivered to the
headquarters of the German commandant. As it happens, Augustin and
Stanislas are on hand to save the day, disguised as German soldiers.
Hotly pursued by their gun-toting adversaries, the airmen and their reluctant
French rescuers manage to make another spectacular get-away and finally reach
a disused airfield. It is here that the fleeing airmen finally find
what they need to complete their mad flight across France...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.