Film Review
Gérard Jugnot first found fame as part of the Équipe du
splendid comedy troupe that included Thierry Lhermitte, Michel Blanc, Christian
Clavier, Marie-Anne Chazel and Josiane Balasko. This talented ensemble
notched up some notable screen hits, including
Les Bronzés (1978) and
Le Père Noël
est une ordure (1982). In common with most of the members
of this troupe, he went on to become a highly successful solo performer and
by the 1990s his was one of the most familiar faces in mainstream French
cinema. His sympathetic, everyman persona and natural fair for comedy
made him a bankable star, but what he really wanted to do was direct his own
films, an opportunity that came his way in 1984 with
Pinot simple flic. Jugnot's
follow up to this surprisingly successful directing debut was another low-key
comedy, this time revolving around the trials and tribulations of a hopelessly
inept scoutmaster - a classic 'fish out of water' comedy.
Despite its seemingly anodyne subject,
Scout toujours proved to
be another box office hit for its director, attracting an audience in France
of 1.8 million. A cut above most family-targeted French comedies of
this era, the film carries faint echoes of May '68 and serves up a typically
Gallic bout of authority-bashing, with Jugnot's central protagonist (a scout
master struggling and failing to assert his authority over a fearsome brood
of mischief-makers) on the receiving end, often with hilarious results.
There's no great sophistication in the script but the film, to its credit,
avoids the off-putting silliness and sentiment milking that sometimes crept
into Jugnot's subsequent films.
Scout toujours is a good-natured
and humorous little fable that offers something for all age groups, although
its main asset has to be its stunning Lozère location, one of the
most picturesque regions in southern France - a tempting future holiday destination
for anyone watching the film.
© James Travers 2019
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Gérard Jugnot film:
Sans peur et sans reproche (1988)
Film Synopsis
In the spring of 1965, a scout group from Paris decide they have had
enough of their authoritarian leader and apply their scout cunning to the
matter of his disposal. This creates a vacancy which Jean-Baptiste
Foucret reluctantly has to fill, in spite of the fact that he could not be
more ill-suited to assume the mantle of scout leader. A man in his
mid-forties he is a naturally shy and retiring individual, not someone who
is calculated to instil discipline in a pack of unruly boy scouts.
Even so, Jean-Baptiste rises to the challenge and sets out to take charge
of a summer camp, heedless of the countless horrors that lie in store for
him.
Things do not start as well as they might have done - the fiends in scout's
uniforms begin with a nice spot of arson, setting fire to their coach and
virtually derailing the entire enterprise. Jean-Baptiste is never
one to admit defeat, however, even when the odds are stacked sorely against
him. They may have no transport but the party can still continue its
cross-country expedition on foot - and what an expedition it proves to be.
The troublesome brats miss not a single occasion to inflict misery on their
hapless leader, with practical jokes that only a genuinely warped mind could
conceive.
In the end, this torrent of humiliations proves too much for Jean-Baptiste
and he makes up his mind to cut his losses and head back home to rejoin
his anxious mother. It is now that the boys under his charge realise
they have gone too far. Shamefaced, they round on their erstwhile
victim and persuade him to stay. Jean-Baptiste is too tender-hearted
to turn his nose up at this seemingly genuine attempt at reconciliation,
and so he agrees to continue leading his flock of budding terrorists and
sociopaths. In the end, he manages to win round his former tormenters
and ultimately triumphs as the hero of the hour...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.