Film Review
Un drôle de caïd
(a.k.a.
Une souris chez les hommes)
was the last 'little comedy' that Louis de Funès lent his
talents to before he became a massive star of French cinema. His next two
films -
Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez
(1964) and
Fantômas (1964) - made
him an instant box office magnet, and top billing in every subsequent film was
assured for the man who, after over a hundred film appearances. had
finally become a big screen legend. It's hard to believe, but in
Un drôle de caïd de
Funès was billed second, after the now virtually forgotten Dany
Saval (and it's not hard to see why she is virtually forgotten).
With her high-pitched voice, endless girly tittering and ear-shattering
screams, Saval's presence is in this film is the one and only thing
that mars its enjoyment value.
Fortunately, in addition to the wonderful inventive comic giant that is
Louis de Funès, the cast boasts two other eminently likeable
actors to take the sting out of Saval's mousy histrionics -
Maurice Biraud and Dany Carrel. The modest Monsieur Biraud is the
perfect stooge for de Funès whilst the big-haired Mademoiselle
Carrel is an essential adornment to any film (as our friend H.G. Clouzet
demonstrated in his film
La Prisonnière
a few years later). Jean Lefebvre,
another regular in the
Gendarme
series of films, shows up in the latter part of the film to help keep
the comedy express from running out of steam, and two other great
comedy performers, Dora Doll and Claude Piéplu, put in a
fleeting but worthy appearance.
Un drôle de caïd
may not be quite in the league of de Funès's subsequent comedy
classics but it is an enjoyably daft entry in the comedy-caper movie
line, a genre that was pretty well mined to exhaustion in the
1960s. Unlike many films of this kind, this one benefits from a
respectable script penned by two authors of some repute - popular crime
writer Albert Simonin and comedy dialogist par excellence Michel
Audiard. The previous year, Audiard had adapted one of Simonin's
novels as
Les Tontons flingueurs (1963),
although Simonin is best-known as the author of the novel that became
Touchez pas au grisbi (1954),
one of the classic polars of French cinema.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Marcel and Francis are two small-time thieves. Their attempt to
break into an apartment one night is witnessed by Lucille, a
neighbouring resident, who decides to try a little blackmail. She
will not report the crooks to the police providing they accept her as
their boss. Aware that Lucille is a former neighbour of his and
knows his wife, Francis has no choice but to accept. The first
job Lucille proposes is to steal her aunt's valuable paintings. Alas,
the robbery attempt proves to be a disaster but, undeterred, the enterprising
threesome are soon planning their next crime: to rob a Parisian
department store...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.