Film Review
The casting of two French cinema divas - Fanny Ardant and Josiane
Balasko - is not enough to save this ill-conceived and poorly executed
mishmash of comédie burlesque and action-thriller. The
refined Ardant looks horribly out of place in this kind of juvenile
exploit in which Balasko is reduced to reprising yet again her highly
caricatured display of working class femininity at its most
vulgar. Gérard Lauzier's direction is poor, but his
biggest offence is his rambling, cliché-sodden screenplay.
This film is nothing more than a pale imitation of those popular French
comedy adventure films of the '70s and '80s, such as
La
Chèvre.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Gérard Lauzier film:
T'empêches tout le monde de dormir (1982)
Film Synopsis
After his mother's death, Benjamin has allowed himself to be tossed back
and forth between his two grand-mothers, Anne and Suzanne, who inhabit two
different social milieus and completely fail to see eye to eye. Now
nine years old, Benjamin tries to make himself indispensable to both of his
reluctant guardians. He helps Suzanne to cheat at poker, and keeps
a close eye on Anne's spending. Meanwhile, Benjamin's father Christian
is away in South America, hoping to make his fortune.
One day, the boy receives an invitation from his father to join him in Brazil,
and, ecstatic at the prospect of a long journey, he manages to persuade his
grandmothers to accompany him. On their arrival, they learn that the
boy's father has already left the country and is on his way back to Paris.
The reason for Christian's sudden flight becomes apparent when some dangerous
enemies of his show up unexpectedly and make an attempt to kidnap Benjamin.
The little boy's South American adventures have only just begun...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.