Film Review
In our present multi-channel, multi-media world, it's hard to imagine
what a crucial part radio once played in the lives of most
people. Before the advent of television, it was the predominant
medium of entertainment and information, and its importance is
succinctly conveyed by
Les Surprises
de la radio, the debut film from French Algerian director Marcel
Aboulker. The latter had success with a series of popular
mainstream comedies, including
Les
Aventures des Pieds-Nickelés (1948) and
La Dame de chez Maxim's (1950),
before he was tragically struck down by an incurable illness at the age
of 47.
Les Surprises de la radio is
by no means a great film (the pace is uneven, the plot contrived and
much of the humour is corny) but it gives an insight into how radio
programmes were made in the late 1930s and how central these were to
people's lives. Marguerite Moreno and Armand Bernard, two of
French cinema's great eccentrics, are prominent in a likeable cast that
includes Grégoire Aslan, Mady Berry, Pierre Dac and Claude
Dauphin. A great comic performer, Dac made an important
contribution to French radio after the war, creating (with Francis
Blanche) one of the most successful of all French radio shows,
Signé Furax. Dac's
formidable presence alone makes
Les
Surprises de la radio worth watching.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The Bontemps are an ordinary French family who, like all of the other residents
in the peaceful little village of Coussy la Chapelle, are chronically addicted
to the radio. Coco, Jacqueline Bontemps's fiancée, enters every
single competition that is broadcast on the radio, but he always does so
under the name Monsieur Bontemps. To his delight, Coco ends up winning
one of these competitions, his prize being a family excursion to Paris to
visit the radio studio and attend a live broadcast. It is with considerable
excitement and some apprehension that the entire Bontemps family sets out
for the French capital, for a day they will never forget...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.