Film Review
Robert de Flers and Francis de Croisset wrote their bourgeois comedy
Les Vignes du Seigneur in 1923, so
this might explain why Jean Boyer's screen adaptation of this popular
stageplay feels somewhat out of place in French cinema of the late
1950s, a time when the Nouvelle Vague was rearing up to make its
mark. It is in fact a remake of an earlier film of the same
title, directed by René Hervil in 1932 and starring Victor
Boucher in the role conferred on Fernandel in Boyer's version.
Whilst never the most imaginative of filmmakers, Boyer had an unerring
knack of turning out uplifting crowdpleasers, and whilst
Les Vignes du Seigneur is far from
being his best film it is an engaging
foutaise, which is all the better
for Fernandel working as part of an ensemble rather than trying to make
it a one-man show.
If the film has a star it is not Fernandel but Béatrice Bretty,
who is a delight to watch in her made-to-measure role as the
mischief-making matriarch Madame Bourgeon. With her commanding
presence, Bretty leads a troupe of equally capable performers that
includes acting legends Pierre Dux (at home in the role of a caddish
aristocrat) and Jeanne Fusier-Gir (wickedly funny as ever). A
stunning Simone Valère supplies sex appeal aplenty, lending a
somewhat surreal edge to her love scenes with
Fernandel. Apparently, some women go for the equine look.
A cute Evelyne Dandry makes her mark in her first substantial screen
role (at the latter end of her career, François Ozon would cast
her in two of his films:
Sitcom (1998) and
Potiche
(2010)) and Lona Rita livens things up as Fernandel's badly treated
'false mistress'. Michel Garland gives a plausible imitation of a
young English brat, his francophobic outbursts providing some of the
film's funniest moments. In spite of (or maybe because of) his
subdued presence, Fernandel is at his most endearing, and whilst
Les Vignes du Seigneur is hardly
his most inspired film it is one of his most entertaining, even if it
really does look as if it belongs to an earlier decade.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean Boyer film:
Le Confident de ces dames (1959)
Film Synopsis
After an interval of eighteen months, Henri returns to his old friend
Count Hubert of Kardec with the news that he is completely cured of his
dipsomania. He is a new man, his addiction to alcohol apparently
supplanted by a craze for telling everyone that he is no longer an
alcoholic. During a shopping expedition, Henri confesses to
Gisèle, Hubert's mistress, that the reason he took to drink was
so that he could forget how much he loved her. Gisèle is
so moved by this revelation that she loses her heart to Henri and the
two become secret lovers. All is well until the day when, after
a car accident, Hubert forces Henri to take a drink with him. A few
glasses of whiskey later, Henri becomes less reticent about his
affair with Gisèle...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.