Film Review
Immediately after their successful collaboration on the wartime comedy-drama
Fortunat,
director Alex Joffé and actor Bourvil linked up for an
altogether different kind of film, one that derives as much humour as
possible from the stresses and strains of modern living in Paris.
Loosely plotted, the film looks as if it may have been conceived by
Jacques Tati as it consists of a rapid succession of comic situations
in which the central character (a modest, everyman type) is subjected to one humiliating disaster
after another. Of course, Alex Joffé is no Jacques Tati
and it goes without saying that
Le
Tracassin lacks Tati's unrivalled finesse. Overlong by at
least twenty minutes, the film becomes repetitive and a tad saccharine
but, thanks to Bourvil's amiable presence and an abundance of imaginative sight gags, there is
scarcely a dull moment. The laughs just keep piling up.
'Tracassin' is an archaic French word which translates as 'bother' or
'worry' - an apt title for a film which reminds us of the less romantic
side of Paris, the constant rush and stress, the nightmare of finding a
parking space during rushhour and the constant threat posed by
ticket-brandishing traffic police officers (who look as if they may
have once been gainfully employed by the SS). To make room in his shoebox
apartment, the hero's bed doubles as a coffee table, not that he need
bother as he seems to spend most of his time stuck in traffic jams in
his 2CV, along with every other Parisian. The following year,
Pierre Étaix would cover the same ground, to even greater comic
effect, in his acclaimed short film
Heureux anniversaire
(1962). Watching these two films in succession is enough to put
you off wanting to visit Paris for life. After this, Bourvil
and Joffé would work together on another wartime comedy-drama
Les Culottes rouges (1962)
and two lively comedies:
La Grosse caisse (1965) and
Les Cracks (1968).
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
André Loriot works at the Psycho-Chemistry Laboratories in
Paris, a company whose slogan 'A good mood makes for good health' is
borne out by the success of the firm's anti-stress pill. One day,
André finds that he could make good use of such a pill.
Having overslept, he makes a poor impression on the woman he is
planning to swap his apartment with and then ends up stuck in a traffic
jam. Arriving late for work, André is instructed by his
boss to take any calls from his wife while he is out entertaining a
female acquaintance. Just when André is getting into his
stride, he falls out with his girlfriend Juliette over a silly
misunderstanding and incurs his boss's wrath further by ferrying a
pregnant woman to the hospital. The final blow comes when
André learns that to obtain his dream apartment he must put up a
large sum of cash that he does not have. The only solution is to
resort to a little blackmail. Before he can confront his two-timing
boss, André must take one of his company's famous pills - with
disastrous results...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.