Film Review
One of the most popular comedy genres in French cinema of the 1930s was the
barracks comedy, which may well have originated from André
Mouézy-Éon and André Sylvane's popular stage play
Tire-au-flanc,
first performed in 1904. Jean Renoir had adapted the play for
cinema in 1928, and over the next
decade there were scores of similar films poking fun at life in the French
army, reusing the same gags and situations until they became old favourites.
Rising star Fernandel featured in several of these popular but formulaic
comedies, including Maurice Tourneur's
Les Gaietes de l'escadron
(1932) and Maurice Cammage's
Le
Coq du regiment (1933).
Fernandel's naive and anarchic comedy persona made him ideal for the part
of the low-ranking solider who gets into scrape after scrape, and other assorted
imbroglios, with his commanding officers. In
Le Cavalier Lafleur,
he plays a womanising reservist whose attempt to swap places with a man having
the same name ends, predictably, in disaster. The gags are as stale
and predictable as the plot, but the film has an infectious sense of fun
about it, which it owes entirely to the youthful Fernandel and his talented
co-stars Louvigny and Pierre Larquey.
The film was adapted from an operetta by André Mauprey and Louis Reine
and was directed (with a frightening scarcity of talent) by Pierre-Jean Ducis,
who also helmed the early Tino Rossi vehicle
Au son des guitares (1936).
As was typical for this kind of comedy, the rambling narrative is punctuated
by several excruciatingly bad musical numbers (some of which were released
as records not long afterwards, proving that domestic masochism was rife
in 1930s France).
Le Cavalier Lafleur is just about salvaged
by Fernandel's exuberant performance, but it's hardly the highpoint of his
career. In common with much of the actor's early work, this muddled
comedy is probably best left to gather dust.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
With his wife conveniently out of the way in Nanteuil, a young reservist
named Lafleur is free to indulge his skirt-chasing habits in Vernouillet,
the town where he is presently stationed. On the day he planned to
meet up with his mistress, Odette, he is assigned to a platoon that is to
meet an important dignitary at Nauteuil. As luck would have it, there
is another man with the same name as him in his squadron. The two men
swap their roles, but the original Lafleur is appointed his lieutenant's
aide-de-camp, and the two end up being billeted with the wife of the other
Lafleur. A series of misunderstandings quickly ensues, but all turns
out well in the end...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.