Film Review
Marc Simenon has three indisputable claims to fame: (a) he was the son
of Belgium's most prolific crime writer Georges Simenon, (b) he was
married to the actress Mylène Demongeot, and (c) he directed
Signé Furax, one of the
craziest French film comedies of the 1980s.
Signé Furax was actually
the last of a handful of films that Simenon Jr directed for the cinema;
he subsequently devoted himself to making films for French television,
up until his tragic death in a train accident in 1999. Marc
Simenon may not have been a particularly distinguished filmmaker but
the mere fact that he helmed a film linked to one of the most important
cultural phenomena in France of the 1950s, namely the
Furax fad, has conferred on him a
certain immortality. The next best thing to directing a
critically acclaimed masterpiece is to put your name to a cult classic.
Furax started out as a radio
programme, first broadcast in France in 1951. Created by comedy
legends Pierre Dac and Francis Blanche, the series ran to over a
thousand episodes (of up to ten minutes in duration) over five series,
aired between 1951 and 1960. The villainous central protagonist
was an obvious cross-between two of the modest enduring characters in
French crime fiction, Arsène Lupin and Fantômas, and the
plots resemble a distillation of all those popular fantasy-thriller TV
shows of the 1960s - a saucy parody of conventional thriller intrigue
pepped up with comicbook-style fantasy-sci-fi elements, a sort of Benny
Hill take on
The Avengers and
Department S. The
popularity of the radio show was such that
Furax spilled into other media -
novels and comic books - and even featured in a daily comic strip in
the newspaper
France Soir.
It would be another twenty years before
Furax finally managed to make it
onto the big screen, as an adaptation based on the second series of the
original radio programme. By this time, the series' creators, Dac
and Blanche, had both quit this mortal sphere, and so the task of
bringing Furax back from the dead and up to date fell to director Marc
Simenon and his co-writer Xavier Gélin (son of the actor Daniel
Gélin, who appears in the film). The results are, to say
the least mixed, and like other, more recent cinematic attempts to
reboot fictional icons of past decades -
Belphégor (2001),
Arsène Lupin (2004) -
more than mildly disappointing. The convoluted narrative is
barely discernible, let alone comprehensible, amidst the non-stop
barrage of unsubtle humour that gets hurled at the
spectator.
Signé
Furax is muddled and messy, but somehow the scattergun comedy
pays off in the end, beating its audience into submission with a
relentless stream of visual and scripted gags, a fair proportion of
which are side-splittingly funny.
With its lunatic plot, flamboyantly cartoonesque characters and
over-generous ensemble of acting talent,
Signé Furax is very much the
precursor of the mainstream comedy that has become depressingly
prevalent in French cinema in recent years. It's a pretty feeble
recipe for success but this film gets away with it through sheer
exuberance, not to mention the comedy gold mine that it had at its
disposal, namely the scripts of the original radio series.
Looking like a super-strength Gallic version of Mike Myers'
Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery
(1997),
Signé Furax is
sporadically brilliant as a parody of 1960s television fantasy but it
spends most of its time getting tangled up in its madcap
silliness. It may not be a patch on the radio series that
inspired it but this rib-tickling overdose of zany French comedy has
more than a few things going for it, not least of which are Mylène
Demongeot at her most seductive, an hilarious incursion by comedy giant Coluche,
possibly the best French sausage gag in history and a reggae-dancing Space Invader who is
so 1980s you could
weep.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
One by one, the great historic monuments of Paris are being stolen and
replaced with cheap imitations. These crimes against France's cultural
heritage are all signed by the criminal mastermind Furax. But how
is this possible? Furax is dead, or at least that is what the
police think. Can it be that France's Public Enemy Number One has
cheated death and is now embarking on the greatest criminal enterprise
in history? Two men are determined to resolve the mystery, police
commissioner Socrate and Fouvreaux, the head of a special security
division that has been set up to deal with incidents such as
this. A pair of private detectives, Black and White, discover
that the real villain is not Furax but a mysterious sect of bearded men
known as the Babus. Led by the totally evil Klakmuf, the Babus
dress up as Father Christmas and venerate the sacred black sausage as
their plans to take over the world near fruition. Only one man
can thwart this dastardly scheme - Furax himself!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.