Film Review
Les Gaspards is without
question one of the weirdest French film comedies ever made; it is
perhaps best described as an LSD-inspired reinterpretation of
The Borrowers. It was the
second collaboration of director Pierre Tchernia and writer René
Goscinny (best known as the co-author of the famous
Astérix comic books),
following the successful
Le Viager (1972). The
film ruthlessly satirises the seemingly insatiable obsession that French
politicians have for major building projects, which reached its zenith
under François Mitterand's "imperial" reign in the 1980s.
Although the film is structurally a mess and is at times marred by its
excesses, it is nonetheless highly entertaining and has some incredibly
funny situations (such as the hilarious sequence in which the
belligerent Gaspards mix up the city's gas, electricity, water and
telephone systems). The film's main attraction is its remarkable
cast list, which includes stars such as Michel Serrault, Philippe
Noiret and Michel Galabru, and also Gérard Depardieu in one of
his earliest film roles. Like most anarchically zany comedies,
Les Gaspards is probably best
appreciated
after you have
partaken of a glass or two of a good French wine.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Jean-Paul Rondin, the owner of a bookshop in the Latin Quarter of
Paris, is just one of the many thousands of people to be vexed by
endless construction projects that are changing the face of the French
capital. When his daughter goes missing, he persuades
Commissioner Lalatte to help him look for her, even though Lalatte is
anxious to get away for his holidays. Jean-Paul Rondin's search
leads him to make an incredible discovery. Beneath Paris there lives a
self-sufficient underworld community led by a genial autocrat, Gaspard
de Montfermeil. Annoyed by the incessant hole drilling, which is
playing havoc with their music recitals, Gaspard and his followers
decide to declare war on the Minister of Public Works...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.