Film Review
Not long after scoring a palpable hit as crime-fighting duo Prudence
and Bélisaire Beresford in Pascal Thomas's
Mon petit doigt m'a dit...
(2005), Catherine Frot and André Dussollier are reunited for
another round of camp amateur sleuthing, British-style.
Le Crime est notre affaire is
Thomas's third Agatha Christie adaptation, following his slick
L'Heure
zéro (2007), and is based on Christie's novel
4.50 from Paddington. Those
with long memories and nothing better to do with their time will recall
that this novel had been previously adapted as
Murder She Said (1961), one of
a series of films in which the incomparable Margaret Rutherford offered
her unique (some would say heretical) interpretation of Miss Marple.
This film may be set in our time but it immediately evokes the world
of the original Agatha Christie novels (far more successfully than the
Margaret Rutherford films ever did). It combines Christie's
penchant for the sinister and the subtly macabre with a characteristically
Gallic sense of fun. Unlike previous attempts to introduce humour
into Christie-style whodunits, the comedy is in sympathy
with the mystery/thriller elements of the film; it does not send-up its subject
but instead serves to lighten the mood and deflect
our attention from the clues that will identify the murderer.
The Queen of Crime may not (as far as we know) have employed a gag
in which a man in a kilt gets trapped above a subway vent (à la Marilyn Monroe),
but there is still a fair smattering of humour in her books, and
for once this film gets the comedy quotient about right.
As in their first Christie outing, Catherine Frot and André
Dussollier have a natural comedy rapport and form what is unquestionably the most entertaining crime-fighting
double act since Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce.  Frot plays the Miss Marple
role in the original novel, although her and Dussolier's characters are actually
based on two of Christie's lesser known sleuths - the amiable
partners in crime, Tommy and Tuppence Beresford. Assisted by
some juicy dialogue, Frot and Dussollier both give a tour de
force performance and revel in the comedy situations into which they are thrown (the
highpoint being the aforementioned kilt and vent gag).
Unlike Margaret Rutherford, who had an aura of Churchillian
invincibility about her in her Miss Marple films, Frot's feisty heroine
is much more vulnerable, and director Pascal Thomas skilfully uses this to
beef up that one essential ingredient for a good thriller-whodunit:
suspense. Assisting (and hindering) Frot and Dussollier
in their investigations is a stellar cast which includes such talented performers
as Hippolyte Girardot, Melvil Poupaud and the aptly named Claude Rich (the latter hilarious
as an irascible chatelain who has the table manners of an industrial suction pump).
Thomas scripts and directs the film with
his usual aplomb and, with a little help from a superb cast (and a
cheeky little mouse), delivers what is assuredly one of the most
enjoyable Agatha Christie adaptations to date. Something to
exercise the little grey cells and stretch those laugh lines,
n'est-ce pas?
© James Travers 2011
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Next Pascal Thomas film:
Ensemble, nous allons vivre une très, très grande histoire d'amour... (2010)
Film Synopsis
Whilst her husband Bélisaire is content with their peaceful
retirement, Prudence is slowly dying of boredom. She pines for a
real-life crime mystery that will tax her intellect and bring some
excitement back into her life. Her wish is granted when
she is visited by an aunt who claims to have witnessed a woman being strangled on
a passing train.. Prudence immediately
begins her investigation, but Bélisaire is sceptical,
particularly when no corpse has been found in
the vicinity of the supposed crime. Undeterred and allowing
herself to be guided by her intuition, Prudence gets herself hired as a cook at the
château which she believes holds the key to mystery.
Her intuition has not deceived her - she soon finds the dead body of a woman,
hidden in a private museum belonging to her employer,
the sour-tempered Roderick Charpentier. But
who is the woman and what is her relationship to the Charpentier
family?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.