Film Review
Having made a promising directing debut with
Le Distrait (1970), Pierre Richard
delivered another winner in
Les Malheurs d'Alfred (
ou Après
la pluie... le mauvais temps), one of his zaniest films. A non-stop
series of mainly visual gags, the film shows Richard at his most confident
and inventive as a comic performer, aided and abetted by a talented supporting
cast that includes Anny Duperey and Pierre Mondy. As with Richard's first
directorial offering, this exuberant romp was produced by La Guéville,
the company that had been created by the actors Yves Robert and Danièle
Delorme. Robert also collaborated with Richard on the screenplay and
would later direct him in some of his most successful film comedies, notably
Le Grand Blond
avec une chaussure noire (1972) and
Le Retour du grand blond
(1974).
Les Malheurs d'Alfred may not be Pierre Richard's most accomplished
film but it includes some of the funniest scenes he ever appeared in.
The highpoint is the sequence in which Richard and Duperey try to stop each
other from committing suicide and end up by driving their neighbour Mario
David mad. Admittedly, the lack of anything vaguely approximating to
a plot makes the film a little tiresome in places but the abundance of good
humour keeps things moving.
The film's only unpardonable failing is that it doesn't have a decent punch
line - it just collapses, as if the wheels have suddenly come off the comedy
juggernaut. Richard had a particular fondness for this film and would
re-cycle some of its better ideas in his latter comedy
La Chèvre (1981). Confident
in his abilities as a director, the comic genius would go on to direct several
more of his comedies, including
Je sais rien, mais je
dirai tout (1973) and
Je suis timide mais
je me soigne (1978).
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Pierre Richard film:
Je sais rien, mais je dirai tout (1973)
Film Synopsis
Ever since he was a child, Alfred Dhumonttye has been afflicted with chronic
bad luck. The most cursed of all architects, every building he has
ever designed suffers the misfortune of some disaster or other. In
the end, Alfred decides that he has no choice but to kill himself, but even
his suicide attempt fails, because he happens to jump into a river just as
Agathe, a television presenter, has the same idea. After being rescued
by the police, Alfred moves in with Agathe, who has grown tired of being
the mistress of television producer François Morel. Alfred accompanies
his neighbour to a TV audition and ends up on the Parisian team of a forthcoming
game show, which consists of bizarre contests between two rival teams.
Morel has decided in advance that the Paris team will lose the competition
to its provincial opponents, but Alfred has other ideas...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.