Film Review
Francis Veber's adaptation of his hugely successful stage play
Le Dîner de cons is his most
popular film to date, attracting an audience of 9.2 million in France
whilst also proving to be a massive hit abroad (notably in the United
Kingdom).
With an impressive list of screenwriting and
directing credits under his belt, Veber has garnered the reputation of
one of France's finest comedy scriptwriters.
Le Dîner de cons is just one
in a long line of top notch Veber comedies that includes such
tirelessly entertaining classics as
Le Grand blond avec une chaussure noire
(1972),
L'Emmerdeur
(1973),
La Cage aux folles (1979) and
La
Chèvre (1981).
Not only is
Le Dîner de cons
one of Francis Veber's funniest films, it is also his most minimalist,
staged almost as a theatrical piece. The cast is small (but
beautifully formed, thanks to the presence of Catherine Frot and
Francis Huster) and most of the action takes place almost entirely in
one set, in the manner of an American sitcom. This pared back
approach allows Veber to get the most out of his witty dialogue, but at the risk
of making the film feel uncomfortably static
in places. The situation is one that Veber has used before in
many of his films: an everyman grouch is saddled with a likeable idiot
who, in next to no time, completely upends his life, but in doing so
makes him a better person. The moral presumably is that a little
chaos makes for a better world.
Just as Veber apparently has difficulty coming up with new storylines,
he also tends to reuse the same character names, so the troublesome
idiot/loser in his comedies is invariably named François/Francis
Pignon/Perrin. Among the many great actors to have played Veber's
comic gump in the past are: Pierre Richard, Jacques Brel, Patrick
Bruel and Patrick Dewaere.
None of these can compare with Jacques
Villeret who, in both the stage and screen versions of
Le Dîner de cons, made the
part his own and gave François Pignon a soul as well as a
capacity for causing mayhem that makes Mr Bean and the entire St
Trinian's brood look like rank amateurs.
Going by his performance in
Le
Dîner de cons alone, Jacques Villeret definitely earns a
place alongside the other great comic actors of French
cinema. Too often relegated to supporting roles for much of
his career, Villeret became a major star through this role, although he
sadly did not live long to appreciate his hard won acclaim as he died
seven years after making this film. Villeret was an exceptional
actor who had a gift for playing tragicomic characters
whose clownish exterior is belied by a humane and often tortured interior.
He won the Best Actor César in 1999 for his
performance in
Le Dîner de cons,
and rightly so. Villeret not only extracts all the laughs he can
from Veber's gag-laden script (his impersonation of a Belgian is so
funny that it is almost infarctus inducing for French spectators), he
also invests his character with depth and humanity, giving the film
more punch than it might otherwise have had. The film won two
further Césars, one award for its screenplay, and another for
Daniel Prévost in his admirable supporting role.
Le Dîner de cons is a
cut above most mainstream French comedies, reminiscent of those old
American screwball comedies with its quick-fire exchanges and wildly
escalating comic situations. However, whilst highly enjoyable, it
does have one or two blemishes that are hard to overlook. Thierry
Lhermitte's character is written as such a contemptuous rogue that, as
hard as the actor may try (and to be honest he doesn't try that hard),
we just cannot empathise with him. Instead, we find ourselves
gloating at his burgeoning misery as the human bulldozer in the form of
Jacques Villeret slowly but surely razes his complacent little life to
the ground. Veber's attempts to get us to sympathise with
Lhermitte at the end of the film are heavy-handed and painfully
schmaltzy, and this robs the film of anything resembling an effective
punch line.
Rather than building to a climax, the comedy just seems to fizzle out a
few minutes before the ending and you can't help feeling a little
cheated. This is one of those comedies that you enjoy intensely
whilst it is running, but when the credits start rolling you are left
feeling a little deflated. It's a bit like being deprived of your
sweet after a sumptuous main course - you expect a mouth-watering
tiramisu, and all you get is a fragment of a Jacob's cream
cracker. Still, whilst it may not be perfect,
Le Dîner de cons is far more
satisfying than its bland American remake,
Dinner for Schmucks (2010), which
barely qualifies as an hors d'oeuvre for anorexic sparrows.
Francis Veber's piquant sauce is better served in the French original
every time, especially if there is a comic genius like Jacques Villeret
on the menu. Bon appétit, mes amis, and go easy on the vinegar.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Francis Veber film:
Le Placard (2001)