Film Review
Seven years after he directed his award-winning 1998 film
The Climb,
the well-regarded American filmmaker Bob Swaim returned to helm, of all things,
a commercial French film comedy,
Nos amis les flics, adapted from
a novel by Jay Cronley. This marks an unexpected departure for the
director who is still best known for the stylish 1980s detective thriller
La Balance (1982) which won the
Best Film César in 1983. In his first French film since
L'Atlantide
(1992), Swaim delivers an exuberant blend of comedy and action thriller which,
whilst not wholly original, does supply a fare quota of laughs.
A
comédie policière in the classic mould,
Nos
amis les flics is by no mean the director's best film but it makes an
entertaining romp, buoyed up by an exuberant cast and gag-laden script.
The film features Frédéric Diefenthal, better known as Émilien
in Luc Besson's hugely popular
Taxi series
of films, and Daniel Auteuil, who makes a surprisingly sinister gangster
villain (having played a virtually identical role in Serge Leroy's more serious
thriller
L'Indic (1983)). Swaim
had previously worked with Auteuil when the actor was virtually unknown in
his debut feature,
La
Nuit de Saint-Germain-des-Prés (1977).
Diefenthal and Auteuil make the most of this pretty formulaic comedy thriller,
ably supported by a cast of comparable talents (Hippolyte Girardot, Pascal
Elbé and Lorànt Deutsch are all eminently well suited to their
roles). With the help of co-screenwriter Mathieu Fabiani, Swaim successfully
manages to combine all of the familiar thriller motifs with knockabout comic
book antics, and the result is a feisty laugh-a-minute romp that can hardly
fail to entertain.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Frédo is a small-time crook who has a knack of botching every job
he turns his hand to. With the help of his four loyal buddies, Frédo
tackles his next hold-up with his usual ineptitude, with the result that
he ends up on the wrong-side of the notoriously hard to please crime boss
Toussaint. Even though the operation is a complete disaster, Toussaint
is prepared to offer Frédo and his chums one last chance to redeem
themselves. He gives them twenty-four hours to break into a modern
art gallery and nab a valuable collection of paintings.
Assisted by his enterprising girlfriend Magali, Frédo is, as ever,
confident of success, but what he doesn't know is that the gallery has been
fitted with the most up-to-date alarm system known to man. Inevitably,
this latest criminal escapade turns into a total fiasco and in the ensuing
confusion Frédo and his hopeless gang have to take a policeman hostage.
Their only chance of salvaging the situation is to pass themselves off as
police officers, but in doing so this leads them into even deeper water...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.