Film Review
Ever since it was first published in serial form in 1857, Paul Fé's
historical adventure story
Le Bossu has been a French literary favourite,
so it is hardly surprising that it has so far been adapted around a dozen
times for the big and small screens. The best known version is a much-loved
classic
directed by André Hunebelle
in 1959 starring Jean Marais and Bourvil, which knocks spots off earlier
adaptations such as the
lacklustre one offered
by Jean Delannoy in 1944. Philippe de Broca's 1997 gutsy big budget
extravaganza is the version that is most faithful to Fé's original
story and makes an entertaining romp, although it lacks the humour, pace
and charm of Hunebelle's more conventional swashbuckler.
One of French cinema's more commercially successful filmmakers, de Broca
notched up a string of box office winners in the '60s and '70s, most showcasing
the talents of Jean-Paul Belmondo:
L'Homme
de Rio (1964),
Le Magnifique
(1973),
L'Incorrigible (1975).
Le Bossu is cut from the same cloth as the director's previous feisty
historical spectaculars,
Cartouche (1962)
and
Chouans (1988), with a star-studded cast and classy production
values calculated to draw a large audience. The film may not have been
an unqualified hit with the critics, but it attracted a respectable 2.3 million
cinemagoers on its first release in France.
A key ingredient in the film's success was the inspired - and certainly risky
- casting of Daniel Auteuil in the lead role. Lacking the physique
and conventional good looks of Jean Marais, Auteuil was by no means the obvious
choice for the part of the swashbuckling hero Lagardère, although
he proves to be surprisingly adept in the film's many superbly choreographed
fight scenes and brings a much needed humanity to the character, something
that tends to have been overlooked in previous adaptations.
No less surprising is the casting of Fabrice Luchini as the lead villain
of the piece, the dastardly Comte de Gonzague, whose sublime nastiness is
given an unexpected human dimension through Luchini's masterfully understated
portrayal of cool villainy interlaced with a tragic vulnerability.
Marie Gillain is as captivating as ever as the heroine, Aurore de Nevers,
a swashbuckling role that requires her to play the spunky tomboy for all
it is worth, and she seems to revel in the opportunity. The no less
capable Vincent Perez, Philippe Noiret, Claire Nebout and Jean-François
Stévenin all make their presence felt in their made-to-measure roles,
adding lustre galore to this enjoyably starry package.
Dazzling performances and sumptuous visuals would ordinarily be enough to
appease the most fastidious of critics, but in the case of
Le Bossu
the glaring deficiencies in other departments prevent the film from being
the unqualified success it deserves to be, given the care and attention that
have been lavished on the production design. (Of the nine Césars
the film was nominated for, it took only one award, for Best Costume Design).
By attempting to cram as much as possible of Paul Fé's original epic
tale into the film,
Le Bossu ends up being a tad overlong and unwieldy,
its uneven pacing aggravated by de Broca's pretty flat and unimaginative
mise-en-scène.
Running to just over two hours, the film outstays its welcome by failing
to achieve an equitable balance of action set-pieces and less showy dramatic
interludes. For the most part, the glossy visuals can hardly fail to
impress, but there are times where the shot compositions are so artificial
and stagy that they deaden rather than enhance the performances. Viewed
as undemanding family entertainment,
Le Bossu is easily on a par with
those great swashbuckling crowd-pleasers of earlier decades, but given the
calibre of the cast and the money that has been lavished on it, you can't
help wondering how much greater the film might have been had it been scripted
and directed with more vigour and imaginative flair.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Philippe de Broca film:
Amazone (2000)
Film Synopsis
Philippe the Duke of Nevers is in love with Blanche de Caylus, the daughter
of a wealthy aristocrat, and he is over the moon when he learns that she
has given him a child outside wedlock. Little does he know that he
has a deadly rival in Count Philippe de Gonzague, who loves Blanche with
such a passion that he will let no one interfere with his plans to marry
her. On the day of Nevers's wedding to Blanche, Gonzague's murderous
henchmen show up and abduct the unfortunate bride. Before he is is
cut down in the ensuing swordfight, Nevers places his baby daughter Aurore
in the care of his trusted ally Lagardère and extorts from him a promise
to keep her safe. Lagardère manages to evade Gonzague's hired killers
by joining a company of travelling players, leaving his enemies to think
that Aurore died by drowning.
Sixteen years later, Aurore has matured into an attractive young woman, but
she knows nothing of her past, least of all her noble parentage. She
has grown up believing Lagardère to be her father, so she is understandably
surprised when her devoted guardian tells her the truth. Lagardère's
one ambition now is to reunite Aurore with her mother, who leads a reclusive
life, unable to come to terms with her tragic past. To that end, he
passes himself off as a hunchbacked accountant so that he can enter the employ
of the wicked Gonzague and bring about his ignominious downfall...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.