Film Review
Indisputably a French comedy classic,
Le
Grand blond avec une chaussure noire exemplifies the thriller
parody that was hugely popular in France in the 60s and 70s and which
can still be relied upon to attract a massive audience when shown on
French television.
By the early 1970s, when this film was
released, the
comédie
policière was one of the most popular genres in French
cinema, and
Le Grand blond was seen by three and half million spectators on its
first release. Georges Lautner is the director who is most
closely associated with this kind of film - he established the genre
with such films as
Les Tontons flingueurs (1963)
and
Ne nous fâchons pas
(1966) - but other filmmakers were not slow to cash in on the success
of the comedy thriller.
Le
Grand blond specifically parodies the spy thrillers that had
become enormously popular by the late 1960s, mainly through the success
of the James Bond films, and most of its humour derives from its
appropriation of the familiar clichés for comic effect.
The film was directed (with great panache) by Yves Robert, who had
previously scored a major hit with
La Guerre des boutons (1962)
and would go on to direct the acclaimed diptych
La Gloire de mon père /
Le Château de ma mère
in 1990. Robert was also an accomplished actor and makes a cameo
appearance in this film (as the conductor of an orchestra which appears
determined to murder and ritually disembowel Mozart's Symphony No. 40).
Screenwriter Francis Veber was near to the start of his career when he
scripted this film, which saw the first appearance of his trademark
everyman character François Perrin / Pignon. Veber's flair
for situation and visual comedy is as evident in
Le Grand blond as it is in his
subsequent comedies, which include such classics as
L'Emmerdeur
(1973),
La Chèvre (1981) and
Le
Dîner de cons (1998). Veber's success lies in
his ability to find humour in the commonplace - he take a familiar
situation and gives it a slight nudge towards the surreal, so that what
could very nearly have been a straight drama or thriller is immediately
transformed into a comedy joy ride of non-stop hilarity.
Le Grand blond perfectly
illustrates Veber's technique - most of the humour stems from that
mainstay of French farce, a simple case of mistaken identity. It
helps that the main protagonist is played by a comedy genius, Pierre
Richard, who fits so perfectly into Veber's madcap universe that it
seems hard to believe he was ever allowed to leave it. Richard
would return as François Perrin in the film's immediate sequel ,
the equally enjoyable
Le Retour du grand blond
(1974), and then subsequently in
Le Jouet (1976) and
La Chèvre (1981).
Starring opposite Pierre Richard is another icon of French cinema, the
magnificent Bernard Blier. Despite his long and varied
filmography, Blier featured most prominently in this kind of film,
almost invariably cast as the implacable villainous 'boss', whose
dastardly schemes would generally be foiled not by the courage and skill
of his opponents but by the sheer bloody-minded incompetence of his underlings.
The excellent supporting cast includes some other very well-known
actors of the period, including Jean Rochefort (impeccable as the
Machiavellian security chief who is so smooth you feel he should be in a
Cinzano ad), Mireille Darc (stunning in a cheeky reverse
décolleté number that
should have started a fashion revolution) and Jean Carmet (at his
funniest as Richard's comedy stooge). The combination of Veber's
unfalteringly funny script and the faultless contributions from such a great cast
make
Le Grand blond avec une
chaussure noire one of the enduring delights of French film
comedy. The 1985 American film
The
Man with One Red Shoe, which starred Tom hanks, was a remake of
this film, but it was nothing like as successful as the original -
partly because it dispensed with most of the best gags, but mainly
because Tom Hanks is not Pierre Richard.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Yves Robert film:
Salut l'artiste (1973)
Film Synopsis
Colonel Louis Toulouse, a senior operative in the French security service,
has become so fed up with his ambitious rival, Milan, that he decides to
send him off on a wild goose chase, in the hope that it will ruin his career.
To this end, he directs Milan's attention towards a man chosen at random
in the milling crowds at Orly airport and identifies him as a dangerous spy.
Without delay, Milan goes after the seemingly ordinary individual, not knowing
that he is in fact nothing more than a second rate musician, François
Perrin. The reason Colonel Toulouse selected him had more to do with
his odd footwear - one of his shoes is yellow, the other black - than with
any latent capacity for espionage. This is not the first time that
Perrin's absent mindedness has got him into deep trouble.
With all of the resources available to him, Milan is soon busily tracking
the supposed agent as he goes about his normal everyday business. On
the face of it, François's behaviour appears to be perfectly ordinary,
but Milan isn't deceived for a moment. It is quite obvious to him that
he is dealing with a very clever and very dangerous individual, one of the
most devious spies he has ever encountered. To prove this, Milan recruits
an attractive blonde named Christine to gain François's confidence
and extract from him proof of his undercover activities. Christine
makes an easy conquest of the hapless musician, but a romantic evening is
somewhat marred when Milan and Toulouse's agents show up at François's
apartment and start wiping each other out...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.