Film Review
Gérard Rinaldi, Jean Sarrus, Gérard Filipelli and Jean-Guy
Fechner - aka Les Charlots - are up to their usual tricks in this, their
fourth - and arguably best - cinema outing. The musical comedians were
by this time at the height of their popularity, with the result that
Le
Grand Bazar, a fairly modest comedy for its time, managed to attract
an audience of just under four million. The film makes good use of
the Charlots' unerring flair for anarchic slapstick and general knockabout
tomfoolery, more so than most of the others they lent their talents to. This
is most evident in the zany set-pieces that show the group at its comedic
best.
The plethora of visual gags are in perfect harmony with the Charlots' upbeat
musical accompaniment, giving the film an irresistible feel-good quality.
Michel Galabru and Michel Serrault are suitably cast as the hero and
villain of the piece respectively, Serrault channelling as much cold-blooded
nastiness as he can into his role as a supermarket manager with some obvious
Trumpian tendencies. As he demonstrated with his previous two
collaborations with the Charlots -
Les Bidasses en folie
(1971) and
Les Fous du stade
(1972) Claude Zidi directs the film with an unmistakable aplomb, deriving
as much humour as he possibly can from the humour-saturated hippy narrative.
Amidst all its comic hi-jinks,
Le Grand Bazar never loses sight of
its serious underlying message. Without labouring the point, the film
offers a cautionary note on the social consequences of untrammelled consumerism,
with friendly local shops driven to ruin by the sudden appearance of anonymous
profit-hungry supermarkets. It is a theme that was particularly current
in the early 1970s and has become increasingly so almost half a century on.
Le Grand Bazar reflected widespread concerns when it was first seen
and today it seems just as pertinent, particularly now that the true costs
of consumerism - environmental degradation, job insecurity,
a widening of the gulf between the haves and the have-nots - have become
glaringly apparent to us all.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Zidi film:
La Moutarde me monte au nez (1974)
Film Synopsis
Gérard, Jean-Guy, Phil and Jean are four friends in their early twenties
who live in the same high-rise apartment block in one of the less salubrious
districts of town. A gang of idealistic idlers, they have no enthusiasm
for work and prefer to while away their time in a more leisurely manner,
preferably with a liberal dose of alcoholic beverage. They find work
at a factory that manufactures lawnmowers, but are soon given their cards
when they show no aptitude for the job. Desperate for money, Gérard
and his buddies are willing to take whatever work comes their way, invariably
with results that range between disastrous and catastrophic.
This insouciant foursome are not the only ones with problems. Their
friend Émile, the owner of a little shop in their neighbourhood, faces
ruin when a huge supermarket opens its doors across the road and starts poaching
all of his customers. The enterprising friends agree that they must
help Émile in his hour of need. To this end, they set about
stealing whatever they can from the loathsome Euromarché, passing
this pilfered merchandise onto Émile in the hope of reinvigorating
his ailing business. It's a valiant gesture of defiance but can Émile
ever hope to compete with a store that dwarfs his own modest establishment..?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.