Film Review
With just under a hundred film credits to his name, Louis de Funès
came within an ace of overnight stardom when he stole a famous scene from
Jean Gabin and Bourvil in Claude Autant-Lara's wartime bash
La Traversée de Paris
(1956). Immediately after this film, he was given the lead for the first
time in Maurice Régamey's comedy
Comme un cheveu sur la soupe
(1957) and his progress to national stardom seemed to be assured when director
André Hunebelle then offered him the leading role in
Taxi, Roulotte
et Corrida, a comedy perfectly suited for his brand of humour.
The film was certainly a hit with the French cinema-going public (it attracted
an audience of 2.5 million), but despite this de Funès still had not
'arrived'. It would be another half a decade before Jean Girault's
Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez
(1964) and Hunebelle's
Fantômas
(1964) turned de Funès from a minor comic performer into a massive
star, arguably the most successful and best loved of all French comic actors.
Taxi, Roulotte et Corrida is a fairly routine comedy that impresses
most in its livelier sequences, where Hunebelle's
skill as an action movie director (most apparent in his lavish
swashbucklers) are employed to good comic effect. Scripted by Jean Halain,
who worked on the bulk of de Funès's film comedies after he had finally
attained stardom in the mid-1960s, it involves a typical French family unwittingly
becoming mixed up with a gang of comicbook hoodlums intent on recovering
a valuable diamond that has somehow found its way into de Funès's suitcase,
The plot - what there is of it - was effectively recycled for a later, far
more successful de Funès vehicle,
Le
Corniaud (1965), and it just about does the job of holding together
a succession of madcap comic sequences which end, in an almost surreal flourish,
with our beloved Fufu doing some fancy legwork with a group of Flamenco dancers.
The cheapness of the production is all too apparent in the over-excessive
- and laughably bad - use of rear projection throughout the film, but de
Funès's immense flair for visual comedy (including his trademark grimaces)
keeps us distracted from this glaring defect for most of the film.
For such a modest offering,
Taxi, Roulotte et Corrida has a surprisingly
classy cast, with de Funès's comic hi-jinks ably supported by another
incredibly prolific actor, Raymond Bussières. A founder member
of the October Group, a prominent agitprop troupe of the 1930s, Bussières
had already been a well-regarded supporting actor in cinema for two and half
decades and, by 1958, he was barely halfway through his career. He had
by this time been credited with de Funès on around half a dozen films,
including Pierre Montazel's
Je n'aime
que toi (1949), Guy Lacourt's
Mon frangin du Sénégal
(1953) and Jean Loubignac's
Ah!
les belles bacchantes (1954); he would go on to play de Funès's
chauffeur in the hit comedy
L'Aile
ou la Cuisse (1976). With his thin stony face and rake-like
physique, Bussières capitalised on his uncanny likeness to Buster
Keaton, and he has rarely come closer to resembling this silent legend than
as de Funès's constantly buffeted side-kick in
Taxi, Roulotte et
Corrida. The film's most charming aspect is the comic rapport between
these two great talents, a classic knockabout double act that prefigures de
Funès's subsequent pairing with Bourvil in the following decade.
At the time, Bussières was married to Annette Poivre, another highly
successful supporting artiste, so it seems natural that they should appear
as man and wife in this riotous family-friendly comedy, along with Poivre's
daughter (from an earlier marriage), Sophie Sel. Playing de Funès's
wife (and looking like a hostage being detained by a maniac throughout) is
Paulette Dubost, the film's most distinguished performer, with a career stretching
back to the dawn of sound cinema and some noteworthy collaborations with the
likes of Jean Renoir (
La Règle
du jeu) and Marcel Carné (
Hôtel du Nord).
Playing de Funès's amorously susceptible son in the film is an unbelievably
sweet Jacques Dynam - six years later they would becoming memorable sparring
partners in Hunebelle's
Fantômas films, Dynam's Inspecteur Bertrand
and de Funès's Inspecteur Juve ranking as probably the two most inept
cops in cinema history. Future porn star Vera Valmont gets to play the
film's most photogenic character (not that there is much competition), a
busty blonde gangster moll with no less sex appeal than contemporary stunners
Marilyn Monroe and Diana Dors. It was André Hunebelle who set
her promising screen career in motion with
Casino de Paris (1957),
and she even landed a part in an Éric Rohmer film (
Le Signe de Lion) before succumbing
to the lure of tawdry erotica in the 1970s. Revelling in the part of
Valmont's hoodlum boss is Max Révol, one of Hunebelle's most utilised
actors. Looking like a chronically over-baked version of Herbert Lom
in a live-action
Scooby-Doo film, Révol is one of the few cast
members not to be eclipsed by de Funès as he throws his all into recovering
a missing diamond - with predictably disastrous results.
Although it was actually released in late November 1958,
Taxi, Roulotte
et Corrida inaugurates a genre of mainstream cinema entertainment in
France that would become enormously popular in later decades - the family-orientated
holiday movie. True, it wasn't until
L'Hôtel de plage (1978)
and
Les Bronzés (1978)
had notched up enormous audiences in the late 1970s that the genre managed
to establish itself, but this early de Funès comedy has all the elements
which go to make up an enjoyable romp of this kind - in particular an ordinary-looking
family having their longed-for dream holiday turned into a living nightmare
by unforeseen events and the sheer damn cussedness of that ghastly month
of August.
© James Travers 2000
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Next André Hunebelle film:
Le Bossu (1960)
Film Synopsis
This summer, Maurice Berger feels he has earned his holiday.
A hard-working taxi driver, he will be glad to escape from the hustle
and bustle of Paris and enjoy a few weeks' peace and quiet in Spain, in the
company of his family. It is in a happy frame of mind that this stressed-out
forty-year-old sets out on his summer expedition, sharing his trusty old car
with his wife Germaine and son Jacques, whilst his brother-in-law Léon
tags on behind in his caravan, along with his wife and teenage daughter.
All is well until the family arrives at the Spanish border. Here, subjected
to the most intensive search by customs officials, Maurice has a hard job
concealing the tobacco he has brought with him. An attractive blonde
named Myriam is standing right beside the taxi driver as they go through the
customs rigmarole. Without Maurice noticing, she surreptitiously slips an
incredibly expensive stolen diamond into his jacket pocket, knowing that she
will be able to recover it once they have passed through customs.
A short while later, Myriam overtakes the Bergers in her car and then pretends
to have had a break down. Of course, Maurice is willing to come to her
help, and as he does so the damsel in distress begins rifling his pockets
- in vain. The jewel has apparently disappeared! Unbeknown to
Myriam, Maurice has already emptied his pockets because they were stuffed
with the tobacco he was smuggling through customs. At this present moment,
the diamond is buried in Maurice's tobacco jar - but no one knows this!
Myriam is in fact working for a gang of seasoned smugglers led by the implacable
boss Fred - they are determined to get their hands on the precious jewel and
will let nothing stand in their way.
The hoodlums' first attempt involves luring the unsuspecting Maurice to
La Corrida, a nightclub which they run in Granada. Here, the unsuspecting
taxi driver is surprised by the number of people who want to dance with him.
Another botched attempt to recover the diamond causes pandemonium to break
out in the nightclub. Unscathed by this latest calamity, the holidaymakers
resume their road journey, only to find themselves put behind bars when the
troublesome jewel is found on them by a police patrol. Maurice can hardly
wait to get back to Paris and resume his mundane life as an honest cabby.
A suspicious looking couple in the back of his taxi bring to mind his recent
adventures in Spain. Can it be that Myriam and Fred have just re-entered
his life?
© James Travers
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