Film Review
Director Robert Siodmak's six year long stint in France (after his hasty
flight from Nazi Germany) got off to a flying start with this amiable if
somewhat mechanical comedy adapted by Édouard Bourdet from his popular
stage play of 1929.
Le Sexe faible shows little - if any - of
the stylistic flair that Siodmak would bring to his far better known Hollywood
productions -
The Spiral
Staircase (1945),
The Killers
(1946),
Criss Cross (1948) - but it makes an enjoyable, good-natured
romp, mostly on account of the colourful turns from a charismatic cast of
some distinction. Jeanne Cheirel is well-suited to play the calculating
matriarch who cannot resist meddling in her grown-up children's lives, in
ways that inevitably go the way of a good P.G. Wodehouse comedy.
There is no ubiquitous Jeeves here to help the scheming dowager in her plans,
but Victor Boucher's humorously ironic
maître d' makes a fair
substitute, allowing Cheirel to continue her campaign of maternal good will
to ludicrous extremes with no chance whatever of achieving the desired outcome.
The plot and characters are pure Wodehouse and with actors of the calibre
of Pierre Brasseur and Marguerite Moreno helping to fill them out to their full
comedy potential there's scarcely a dull moment. With seductive starlets
Mireille Balin and Betty Stockfeld on board there's no shortage of sizzle
and glamour, and Siodmak makes the most of the latter's erotic possibilities
with a memorable scene in which she strips down to her underwear behind a
far from opaque screen (a tantalising foretaste of the director's later film
noir offerings). Ultimately it is Moreno's man-eating Russian countess
who makes the biggest impact - proving beyond any doubt that if there is
a weaker sex women are most definitely not it.
© James Travers 2017
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Robert Siodmak film:
La Crise est finie (1934)
Film Synopsis
Madame Leroy-Gomez is one of the wealthy patrons of an exclusive Parisian
hotel. A firm believer in the idea that one can never have too much
of a good thing as far as lucre is concerned, she encourages her sons Jimmy
and Philippe to marry for money, not knowing that they are too fond of their
carefree bachelor existence to fall in with these well-meaning plans.
Between her bouts of self-interested matchmaking Madame Leroy-Gomez concerns
herself with her other son, whose marriage appears to be in some difficulty,
and her free-spirited daughter, who is far too independently minded for her
own good. Thankfully, Madame Leroy-Gomez can rely on the services of
Antoine, the ever discrete maître d'hôtel, to keep her abreast
of developments, although even Antoine's abilities prove insufficient in
the end. It seems that Jimmy is too romantically involved with a chambermaid
named Nicole to go where the money is, and Philippe is none too keen to play
gigolo to the Countess Polacchi, a woman who is at least forty years his
senior...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.