Film Review
Picking up where
The Return of the
Pink Panther ended, the fifth film in the popular
Pink Panther series continues the
on-going feud between the bungling Jacques Clouseau and his erstwhile
superior turned homicidal maniac Charles Dreyfus. While the
formula is being to look just a little tired (and this time the
screenwriters didn't even bother to work the Pink Panther diamond into
the narrative), the mere presence of two of Britain's comedy giants -
Peter Sellers and Herbert Lom - locked in mortal combat ensures the
laughs keep coming, even if at least half of the jokes appear to have
been recycled from previous films. By this stage, Sellers had
reputedly grown tired with both Clouseau and director Blake Edwards,
and his health (mental and physical) presented series problems for the
production team. In spite of this, the actor turns in one of his
most entertaining comedy performances, more than capably matched by a
superb (so deranged you can hardly believe it) Herbert Lom.
The plot is more lunatic than ever, a James Bond-style spoof in which
the only man who can prevent a totally unhinged Inspector Dreyfus from
destroying the world is, ironically, the man most likely to destroy it,
Inspector Clouseau. Whilst Dreyfus is busy building his Doomday
Weapon in his suitably Gothic lair, getting madder by the minute,
Clouseau is up to his usual tricks, wrecking the Entente Cordiale
between Britain and France and massively shortening the life expectancy
of the world's hired assassins. Of course, this being a Bond
spoof, Clouseau must have at least one amorous encounter, and so
Lesley-Anne Down is roped in to expose the more romantic side of the
French Inspector (with predictable results). Whilst it falls
somewhat short of the brilliance of
A
Shot in the Dark,
The Pink
Panther Strikes Again is easily one of the most enjoyable
entries in the series - a well-paced, gag-packed romp featuring Sellers
and Lom at their near-best. The sequence in which Sellers
attempts to extract one of Lom's teeth, whilst both are under the
influence of nitrous oxide, is one of the highlights of the Pink
Panther series, hilarious no matter how many times you watch it.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Charles Dreyfus, formerly Chief Inspector Dreyfus of the French
National Police, is a changed man. He no longer harbours any
homicidal feelings for Inspector Jacques Clouseau, the man who drove
him insane and robbed him of his position. He is, in fact, safe
to be released back into the community after his stay in a psychiatric
hospital. At least, that is how it would seem before
Clouseau pays Dreyfus a friendly visit and sends him back over the
edge. A few days later, Clouseau is notified that Dreyfus has
escaped from the hospital and is once more intent on murdering
him. Having failed to kill his sworn enemy by blowing up his
apartment, Dreyfus decides far more drastic measures are called for if
he is to succeed. With the help of a gang of underworld
criminals, he kidnaps a world-leading nuclear physicist and compels him
to build a Doomsday Weapon. Dreyfus is now ready to deliver his
ultimatum to the world. Either Clouseau is assassinated or the
world will be vaporised. Without delay, the world's leading
powers send their best armed assassins out to kill Clouseau, but the
result is a foregone conclusion. His path strewn with dead
assassins, Clouseau finally tracks Dreyfus to his hideout, a castle in
the Bavarian mountains. Armed with the deadliest weapon ever
created, Dreyfus can hardly fail to destroy Clouseau this time...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.