Film Review
Le Drapeau noir flotte sur la marmite
is not the most memorable of the half a dozen or so films that Michel
Audiard directed but, equipped with a colourful cast and a totally daft
premise, it manages to be an amiable little time waster, Georges Brassens'
maritime-themed music being a welcome bonus. In the twilight of
his illustrious career, Jean Gabin has rarely looked more at home in a role
than he is here as a cantankerous old sea dog (or rather
purported
sea dog), partnered by an impossibly well-preserved Ginette
Leclerc. Both of these old pros, along with the rest of the cast,
are well-served by Audiard's crisp and witty dialogue (Audiard
was always far better as a screenwriter than a director), and the only
thing that appears to have gone overboard is a storyline with more
in the way of substance. Admittedly, the film doesn't sink, but it has a
devil of a job staying afloat.
The chalk-and-cheese pairing of Gabin with Jacques Marin makes for a surprisingly good
double act, hilarious when their do-it-yourself boat finally hits the
waves and immediately comes a cropper. Audiard may not have been
the most inspired of film directors but he certainly gets the best out
of his cast, particularly his supporting artists Claude Piéplu,
Jean Carmet and André Pousse. Piéplu is on
particularly fine form, in the kind of idiotic authority figure role
that would become his stock-in-trade.
Le Drapeau noir flotte sur la marmite lacks the
caustic humour and anarchic fun of Audiard's other films
(
Elle boit pas, elle fume pas, elle drague pas, mais... elle cause!,
Bons baisers... à lundi),
but in its favour it does have a great cast and a fair quota of gags, so it has no
trouble helping any resolute landlubber to while away a dull
afternoon. Worse things happen at sea...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Michel Audiard film:
Bons baisers... à lundi (1974)
Film Synopsis
Railway employee Antoine Simonet is delighted when he wins a prize for his
realistic matchstick model of a frigate. Just as impressed is his boss,
Alexandre Volabruque, who promptly commissions him to construct a full-size
fishing boat. Volabruque isn't too many years from his retirement,
and it has long been an ambition of his to pass his declining years fishing
off the coast of Dieppe. Antoine is more than willing to oblige, but
he soon realises that the task of building a real boat is beyond his abilities.
So, determined not to be defeated, he enlists the help of his uncle, Victor
Ploubaz, an old sea captain.
For years, Victor has gone on about his seafaring exploits, and no one seems
to be better qualified to guide Antoine in his ambitious undertaking.
So, without delay, Antoine begins building the vessel in his back garden
with the help of his SNCF colleagues, guided by Uncle Victor. Unfortunately,
owing to some crossed wires, what Antoine ends up with is a small yacht,
not the fishing boat he had envisaged. There is further trouble in
store when the boat is launched and departs for its maiden voyage.
This is the point at which Victor's tales of a life on the ocean wave are
revealed to be nothing more than a fabrication...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.