Film Review
Henri Alibert's screen career got off to a flying start with
Au pays du
soleil (1933), adapted from a successful operetta which he had created
the previous year with his father-in-law Vincent Scotto. Alibert was
now on the way to becoming one of France's most popular chansonniers and
his talents, as both a singer and comic performer, were put to good use in
a series of light film comedies, including three directed by one of the masters
of this form of mass entertainment, René Pujol -
Un de la Canebière (1937),
Titin des Martigues (1938) and
Les Gangsters du château
d'If (1939). In these films, Alibert was extremely well-partnered
with some other great talents of the day, including Pierre Larquey, Rellys
and Aimos, all of whom would leave a significant imprint on French cinema
of the 1930s and '40s.
In
Titin des Martigues, Alibert, Larquey and Rellys form a sublime
comedy team that could easily give the Marx Brothers and the Threes Stooges
a good run for their money. As was typical of this genre of film, there's
practically no sense to the narrative - it's essentially just a rapid succession
of madcap escapades in which the likeably daft trio get themselves in and
out of the narrowest of scrapes. Every so often, there is a break in
the daffy narrative to allow Alibert to make use of his vocal skills, but
it is Rellys and Larquey who seem to have the most fun, clowning about as
if their lives depended on it. For those who only know Rellys for his
dramatic roles (most likely his touching Ugolin in Marcel Pagnol's
Manon des sources) this
film will come as quite a surprise. Once he had watched this film,
the world famous clown
Grock
visited the actor and showered him with the warmest of compliments.
Rellys's uncanny similarity to Stan Laurel is made fun of in one scene, in
which he is cruelly tormented by an Oliver Hardy look-a-like (Jim Gérald).
Larquey proves himself to be the world's worst animal minder when, one by
one, the dozen or so dogs placed in his care by a trusting client start disappearing
until he is left with only one - he ends up asking himself if one of the
troublesome pooches isn't eating all the others. Meanwhile, Rellys
and Alibert are happy playing idiot taxi-boys to a pair of rich Americans,
with fairly predictable results - in the Mack Sennett vein.
Titin
des Martigues is about as silly as any unhinged French comedy of this
time but its sense of fun is unflagging and the sizzling chemistry between
the three leads (think of them as Van de Graaff generators in human form)
ensure that there is never even the vaguest hint of a dull moment. The
laughs just keep coming.
© James Travers 2016
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Film Synopsis
Titin des Martigues is a cheerful young man who runs a lottery stall
at a busy funfair in Paris. He is desperately in love with the adorable
Yvette, but he has a fierce rival in Dix-de-Der, who is equally determined
that she should be his bride. Through Dix-de-Der's connivance, Titin
is ruined and his only hope of winning Yvette is to prove himself capable
of earning an honest living. With his loyal friends Lacroustille and
Papafar, Titin heads off to the South of France and enthusiastically throws
himself into whatever work comes his way, heedless of the disasters that
lie ahead. Luck appears to smile on the trio when they get themselves
engaged as chauffeurs and dog-minder to a pair of wealthy Americans, but
further calamities are just around the corner...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.