Film Review
Rightly or wrongly, Gérard Pirès is best known for
directing the first - and best - of the Luc Besson produced
Taxi
films, which are some of the most successful action films to have been
made in France. In
Les
Chevaliers du ciel, Pirès finds himself once more in the
driving seat of a souped-up juggernaut of an action film and gets to realise
every director's dream, playing with some of the most expensive
military hardware on the planet - all paid for by the French tax payer.
With its hackneyed characterisation and slightly ludicrous plot,
Les Chevaliers du ciel looks as if
it may have been inspired by a strip cartoon. In fact, it
was! The film is based on
Les
Aventures de Tanguy et Laverdure, a series of comic book
adventures by Jean-Michel Charlier and Albert Uderzo, published between
1959 and 1971. Somehow knowing this fact makes the film somewhat
more bearable, and if you happen to be acquainted with Tanguy and
Laverdure, as every self-respecting schoolboy of a certain generation
should be, there can be positively no excuse for not watching it.
The pairing of actors of the calibre of Benoît Magimel and Clovis
Cornillac (two of the biggest stars in French cinema today) is
certainly a casting coup, although you do wonder whether the film needs
it. What most grabs our attention are not the performances (which
for the most part are greatly diminished by some laughably bad dialogue) but the
pacy action sequences - particularly the stunning aerial shots which
are, quite literally, breathtaking. The latter rival anything you
will find in a contemporary Hollywood blockbuster, in style and impact
if not in scale. Anyone who enjoyed Pirès's
Taxi film will
assuredly relish this exhilarating spectacle of high octane escapist nonsense.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Gérard Pirès film:
Erotissimo (1969)
Film Synopsis
During an air display at Farnborough, a Mirage 2000 jet goes off the
radar. Two French fighter pilots, Antoine Marchelli and
Sébastien Vallois, are sent to intercept the plane. They
locate it over the North Sea. Seeing that the Mirage is about to
open fire on his colleague's plane, Antoine has no choice but to shoot
it down. On his return to base, Antoine is informed that the
Mirage was taking part in a top secret anti-terrorist exercise and that
his action has caused the death of a pilot in the French Air
Force. No one seems to want to hear Antoine's account of
what happened and the pilot soon begins to suspect that he has
been set up. But by whom - and for what purpose...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.