Film Review
French cinema has a long, and mostly unfortunate, history of adapting
popular comic books into live action films. Occasionally, the
transposition works a treat -
Astérix et Obélix Mission
Cléopâtre (2002) being a rare success - but in
most cases it fails abysmally and what ends up on screen bares scant
resemblance to the work that inspired it.
Bibi Fricotin belongs to this
latter category, an enthusiastic but ultimately doomed attempt to bring
to life a character of the same name that was created by Louis Forton
in 1924 and who has since appeared in over 100 comic books.
In the film, Fricotin is played with customary gusto by Maurice Baquet,
a likeable and versatile actor who was as adept at straight drama as he
was at knockabout comedy. His long and varied filmography
includes Jean Renoir's
Les Bas-fonds (1936) and Louis
Daquin's
Premier de cordée
(1944), as well as some notable comic appearances in such films as
Fernand Rivers'
Tire au flanc (1949).
Baquet's wiry physique and seemingly boundless energy had already
allowed him to play one comic book character successfully, Ribouldingue
in Marcel Aboulker's
Les Aventures
des Pieds-Nickelés (1948) and
Le Trésor des Pieds-Nickelés
(1949), but, now aged 40, he was probably a little on the mature side
to play the teenage Fricotin.
Despite looking a little long in the tooth, Baquet gives great comic
value and in some scenes he is irresistibly funny. The restaurant
sequence in which he doubles as a waiter and service station attendant
might well have been written for Buster Keaton in his heyday and Baquet
makes it just as hilarious. Another moment of hilarity is Baquet
driving Colette Darfeuil (arrayed in a wedding dress) down some French
country lanes in a dodgem car. Before you know it the action has
shifted to a fairground - one of many examples where jump-cutting is
used for comedic effect. There's no end of quality comic support from
the likes of Paul Demange, Alexandre Rignault and Jacques Dufilho, and
Yves Robert shows a surprising flair for slapstick, just a few years
before he began to make a name for himself as a film director.
Many years before his true talents were recognised and rewarded, Louis
de Funès crops up briefly as a swimming pool attendant, a part
that might just as well have been given to any passing comic
actor.
Had a little more care and attention gone into both the direction and
the script
Bibi Fricotin
could have been something far substantial than the lightweight
frivolity it ended up as. Director Marcel Blistène had a fairly
undistinguished career and if he is remembered today it is only for his
first two films, the Édith Piaf vehicle
Étoile sans lumière
(1946) and moody noir piece
Macadam (1946).
Blistène's idea of comedy seems to rely on infantile slapstick
and trick editing (reverse shots repeated ad nauseum), two things that
date the film badly and make it more suitable for children than
adults. Maurice Baquet's lively performance prevents
Bibi Fricotin from being dull but
it hardly does justice to his talents, nor to the comic books on which
it is based.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Private detective Antoine Gardon is on the trail of a mislaid
inheritance when he runs up against the eternal do-gooder Bibi
Fricotin. The quest begins with a mysterious trunk marked with
the letter 'Z' which Bibi, assisted by fortune teller Fatma, traces to
a conjurer, Tartazan. The latter intends robbing his niece
Catherine of her inheritance, but Bibi sees through his scheme and
embarks on his own treasure hunt, with Gardon equally determined to
find the lost fortune before him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.