Film Review
Of the nine films that Fernandel made with director Henri Verneuil,
Le Boulanger de Valorgue is
arguably the best made and the most satisfying. There are shades
of Marcel Pagnol in the film's whimsical yet strikingly naturalistic
depiction of village life in the South of France. The plot and
its setting remind us of Pagnol's
Angèle (1934), the film
that gave Fernandel one of his first significant dramatic roles.
Yet the tone is lighter, the situations more overtly comical.
Whilst the film does not downplay the social stigma associated with
childbirth outside wedlock, it takes a more light-hearted approach,
allowing Fernandel to play to his strengths as a comic performer.
Although Henri Verneuil is perhaps best remembered for his slick
policiers of '60s and '70s, notably
Le Clan des Siciliens (1969)
and
Peur sur la ville (1975), he
was a remarkably versatile director, as capable of delivering a
boisterous comedy such as
Les Lions
sont lâchés (1961) as a poignant melodrama like
Des gens sans importance
(1955).
Le Boulanger de
Valorgue combines social realism and comedy to great effect and
is easily one of Verneuil's most engaging films. Photographed in
a way that vividly captures the stark beauty of the rural location and
populated with believable, well-drawn characters rather than the
familiar stereotypes, this film has a realist edge and auteur
sensibility that you would not expect to find in a mainstream French
comedy of this era.
Hernri Verneuil was one of a handful of directors who was able to get
the best out of Fernandel, as this and their later collaboration
La Vache et le prisonnier
(1959) amply demonstrate. In a part that fits him like a
well-worn glove, the great comic actor has no need to indulge in the
excesses for which he is known but instead plays the baker of Valorgue
as a real character, with real feelings and real failings.
Fernandel is hilarious in the sequence when his character goes
off to Italy and finds he can only communicate with the locals through
hand gestures, but equally he gives a heartrending turn when his
character opens his heart to his future daughter-in-law and shows an
unexpected compassionate side to his nature. Rarely is a great
comedian also a great actor, but this film leaves us in little doubt
that Fernandel was a formidable acting talent, a performer who could
make you cry and laugh with extraordinary ease, often in the same scene.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Henri Verneuil film:
Le Mouton à cinq pattes (1954)
Film Synopsis
Valorgue, a quaint little town in the south of France, used to be such an
idyllic spot. Now it is caught up in the most frenzied of civil wars,
with half of the town siding with the good-natured baker, Félicien
Hébrard, and the other half with the grocer, the cantankerous old
widow Zanetti. It all began a year ago, when the baker's son, Justin,
was pursuing a secret love affair with Zanetti's daughter, Françoise.
Who could have foreseen that so few stolen kisses would result in so much
acrimony? After her boyfriend has departed for his military service
in Algeria, Françoise goes off to Italy, and returns ten months later
with a baby. Zanetti is so incensed by this turn of events that she
seizes the infant and unceremoniously drops it into Félicien's unsuspecting
lap.
Try as he might, the baker is unable to convince his sharp-tongued enemy
that his son had anything to do with the baby. Justin is far too respectable
and level-headed a lad to put himself in the family way! Zanetti knows
otherwise and before another word is uttered she and the baker are at war.
The postmaster, Monsieur Aussel, takes the side of the grocer and immediately
launches a fierce campaign against the baker, insisting he has brought shame
and dishonour on two respectable women. Félicien responds by
refusing to sell bread to anyone supporting Aussel's programme of vilification.
With the town now divided into two camps, the Félicienists and the
Zanettists, law and order soon begins to break down.
A lorry loaded with flour is prevented from reaching the baker, and before
long there is a thriving black market in bread. Things go from bad
to worse when the enterprising postman Évariste sets about trying
to make bread in the communal oven. As anarchy breaks out, Félicien
is driven to go after Françoise, who has by now fled to Italy with
her baby. On his return he is shocked to discover that Évariste
has taken over his bakery. There is only one person who can settle
the dispute and restore order to the town - the baker's son, Justin.
The confession that is forced out of the lad when he returns on leave is
not likely to please Félicien...
© James Travers
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