Film Review
Before he began his fruitful partnership with Marcel Carné with
Jenny
(1936), a precursor to the poetic realist masterpieces they would make
together, the writer Jacques Prévert lent his talents to a
handful of pretty nondescript comedies, of which
Un oiseau rare is probably the most
entertaining. Those familiar with Prévert's subsequent,
doom-laden offerings, will be taken by surprise by this frivolous
little comedy, which uses the well-worn device of a case of mistaken
identity as a pretext for an amusing social satire. This was one
of the first films to be directed by Richard Pottier, who like
Prévert, would gravitate to darker subjects in later years -
Picpus (1943) and
Meurtres
(1950) being two of his best films - but for most of his career he
stuck with more popular fare, comedies and musicals, many featuring
singing legends Tino Rossi and Luis Mariano.
The inspiration for the film came from Erich Kästner's 1934 novel
Drei Männer im Schnee (
Three Men in the Snow), which has
been adapted for cinema several times, the best-known version being
Edward Buzzell's American film
Paradise
for Three (1938), which starred Robert Young and Mary
Astor. Prévert and Pottier turn Kästner's quirky
novel into an exuberant if somewhat predictable farce, which gave
rising star Pierre Brasseur ample opportunity to flex his comedy muscle
in such distinguished company as Max Dearly, Pierre Larquey and Jean
Tissier - a more likeable bunch of eccentrics you could not wish
for. The mistaken identity and eccentric millionaire plot devices
are clunky contrivances that date the film badly but the plethora of
comic situations, played to maximum comedic effect by a superb
ensemble, make up for this at least threefold.
Un oiseau rare is a cut above most
French comedies of this time and, because it doesn't take itself at all
seriously, it is one of Pottier's more palatable films.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Richard Pottier film:
27 rue de la Paix (1937)
Film Synopsis
Melleville, the reclusive boss of a multinational company, is surprised
when his valet, Valentin, wins first prize in a competition to come up
with the best slogan to market a range of lamps. The prize is a
holiday at a luxury hotel in an alpine ski resort and Melleville
insists on accompanying his valet, passing himself off as a man of
modest means. Jean Berthier, the young man who won the second
prize, also wins a holiday in the same hotel, but is mistaken for an
eccentric millionaire. Whilst Melleville is treated with contempt
by the hotel staff, who are blissfully unaware that he is their
employer, Berthier receives the full V.I.P. treatment. Melleville
decides enough is enough when he discovers that his daughter has fallen
for Berthier...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.