Film Review
They say that imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but when it
comes to art it is more likely a sign of intellectual laziness and/or
lack of imagination. Michel Hazanavicius's 2006 film
OSS 117: Le Caire nid d'espions
was a shameless pastiche of the kind of spy-thriller movie that was
universally popular in the 1960s, a film so packed with clichés
that it almost defied the laws of physics. Yet the film was an
instant classic, reacquainting audiences with France's premier secret agent
Hubert Bonisseur de La Bath (known to his enemies and paymasters as
double-one-seven) and proving beyond any doubt that a spoof of a
popular genre can have genuine artistic merit as well as great
entertainment value. Excessive use of multiple screens
and sloppy back projection would normally clear a cinema hall faster than
a dirty bomb or a sudden outbreak of bubonic plague
but here they are employed to devastatingly witty effect and make
you long for those halcyon pre-CGI days when moviemaking was far less slick
and formulaic than it is today
In this second outing for OSS 117, the world's most chauvinistic spy
finds himself in Rio de Janeiro looking for a former Nazi who still
dreams of world domination whilst being pursued by vindictive
Chinamen. In the process, he has an uncomfortable brush with
feminism (courtesy of an Israeli agent, with nice legs) and an
fraught introduction to hippie culture. Never let it be said that the life of a
secret agent is an easy one. Needless to say, OSS 117 gets his
man (in both senses of the word), and a grateful France rewards him
with the Legion of Honour, not for defeating the aforementioned Nazi
but for helping to cover up some embarrassing war time secrets.
The irony will not be lost on anyone who lived through the last De
Gaulle presidency, or indeed any French presidency since.
OSS 117: Rio ne répond plus
is every bit as tongue-in-cheek funny as its predecessor and, unlike
the vast majority of comedies of recent years, it stands up to repeated
viewings (even in the same evening). The film is not only a
superlative parody of the 1960s spy thriller but a brilliantly observed
commentary on the era in which it is set. The devilishly smooth
La Bath looks like a relic from another era (somewhere between the
Devonian and the Cretaceous), convinced that a woman's place is in the
home and spouting the kind of overt racist comments that would now
cause even the leaders of the National Front to blush in abject
shame. And yet he is far from being an unsympathetic
character. Endearing in his naivety and ineptitude, agent OSS 117
personifies an era in which racism and sexual discrimination were part
of the fabric of our society, and it's a cheering thought to realise
just how far we have come in less than half a century.
This is a great film for rampant cinephiles, who will no doubt be in
seventh heaven spotting all the references to classic films, which
range from the early James Bond movies to the more recent Indiana Jones
films, with one or two amusing digressions into Hitchcock
territory. Racism is not an easy subject to treat lightly but
this film somehow gets away with it, although some of the humour does
get
very close to the knuckle
(La Bath's ingenious solution to the Nazi problem is to give the
heel-clicking fanatics their own independent territory, a big like, er,
Israel...). The one sequence that can never fail to elicit a good
belly laugh from any audience is the one in which OSS 117 attempts to
barbecue a crocodile on a camp fire. Ripping the bloody viscera
out of a large dead reptile becomes far more than an attempt to make a
nice tasty evening snack; it epitomises the determined struggle of the
alpha-male to assert his control over the natural world, only to
completely ruin his dress shirt and his self-esteem in the process.
Jean Dujardin is fast usurping Sean Connery's place as the coolest spy
in the movies, but more significantly he is emerging as one of France's
greatest comic actors. The part of OSS 117 appears to have been
made for Dujardin and we will doubtless see him return in the role in
the not too distant future (as of April 2010, another sequel is
currently being planned). I for one can hardly wait.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1967, France's top secret agent Hubert Bonisseur de la Bath,
codenamed OSS 117, is sent to Brazil to locate a former high-ranking
Nazi who is threatening to sell a microfilm listing the names of French
collaborators in WWII. Partnered with Dolores, a beautiful but
deadly agent from the Israeli secret service Mossad, Bonisseur not only
has power-mad Nazis to contend with, but Chinese hit men who are bent
on revenge. Whilst OSS 117's mission is merely to recover the
compromising microfilm before it falls into the wrong hands, Dolores
intends to capture the elusive Nazi officer and bring him to justice in
Israel. After a delirious chase from Rio de Janeiro to the Iguazu
Falls, OSS 117 ends up having to confront his greatest adversary, his
fear of heights...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.