Film Review
After the staggering success of the 1966 film
La Grande Vadrouille, the production
team of
Le Mur de l'Atlantique were clearly hoping to repeat the success with the
winning formula of Bourvil and an outlandish comic farce set at the time of the Nazi occupation.
Unfortunately, despite some memorable comic moments, this film is little more than a pale
imitation of that earlier film. Needless to say the film was nowhere near as successful
at the box office.
On a sad note, this was
the very last project on which the great comic actor Bourvil worked. Very ill when
he was making the film, he died a short while after completing the shooting. That
fact alone casts a veil of sadness over the film and the comedy somehow feels strangely
inappropriate.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Marcel Camus film:
Orfeu Negro (1959)
Film Synopsis
In 1943, Léon Duchemin is leading a peaceful life in Nazi occupied
France. Twenty years after his wife walked out on him, he now lives
in a small Normandy town with his sister Marie and daughter Juliette, and
together they run a restaurant that is popular with German officers and black
marketeers, as well as members of the French Resistance. Léon
has no intention of getting himself mixed up in the war and wants only to
lead a quiet life, an ambition that is cruelly thwarted when an English officer
named Jeff falls out of the sky one day and crashes onto his daughter's bed.
Léon has no choice but to offer the unwelcome officer a place in his
humble abode, and Jeff wastes no time trying to get on intimate
terms with Juliette.
Through a series of chance events, Léon then manages to get his hands
on a set of plans of the German fortifications on the Atlantic Wall, together
with details of a top secret new weapon. Jeff realises at once the
importance of these documents and persuades the restaurant owner that they
must be delivered to the Allies as quickly as possible. After an eventful
trip to England, Léon is parachuted back into France, and discovers
that his daughter now has a baby - and it's not too hard to work out who
the father is. Meanwhile, Jeff is busy making his contribution to a
plot to assassinate Field Marshal Rommel when he visits the town in a few
days' time. With the helped of a stuffed antelope, Léon succeeds
in thwarting the assassination attempt and is soon on his way back to England
- just before the Allied invasion gets under way...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.