Film Review
One well-known fact about Lino Ventura is that, before he became an actor, he was a professional
wrestler. Among his many sparring partners he could hardly have had one who was
quite so tough and indomitable as Annie Girardot.
The pair make a sublime warring couple in this adaptation of a Georges Simenon novel,
Le Bateau d'Émile. No falls, no submissions -
just plain honest-to-goodness entertainment. The two
actors appeared together in a few later films including
Claude Pinoteau's
La Gifle (1974).
Not long before this fun-packed exploit, director Denys de La Patellière
worked with Ventura on an altogether different kind of film, the wartime classic
Un taxi pour Tobrouk (1960).
In addition to the memorable Ventura-Girardot
double act, there's also Michel Simon's poisonous old man routine, and Pierre Brasseur as possibly
the smoothest villain you'll ever see in any French film.
Generally, the film is much lighter in tone than Simenon's novel, and even
slips into farce in a few sequences. It's worth watching the film just for the scene
where Ventura gallantly picks up Girardot only to drop her into a puddle. Denys
de La Patellière's too restrained direction prevents the film from being as
dark or as interesting as the story warrants, but amidst the comedy there are some dark
undercurrents which do suggest conflict - between the sexes, and between the working classes
and their paymasters.
Le Bateau d'Émile is not a particularly
great film, but it has a lot of charm and a cast of extraordinary calibre.
How could it fail to please?
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Denys de La Patellière film:
La Fabuleuse aventure de Marco Polo (1965)
Film Synopsis
Realising he is close to death, Charles-Edmond Larmentiel returns to his home town of
La Rochelle to enact a cruel vengeance on his family. Forty years ago, his father,
the owner of a prosperous fishing company, drove him away from the town after he managed
to get one of the working girls pregnant. To the horror of his younger brother François,
Charles-Edmond reveals that he intends to bequeath his entire estate to his illegitimate
son, Émile Bouet, a mere fisherman. Afraid that he may be ruined, François
befriends Émile and offers him a senior job in his company. Émile
can hardly believe his good fortune, but realises his prospects may be jeopardised by
his temperamental girlfriend Fernande...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.