Film Review
Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin were admirably served by their first
two films together - Pierre Grimblat's
Slogan (1968) and André
Cayatte's
Les Chemins de Katmandou
(1969), but their third screen pairing just looks like a lazy excuse
for some simulated sex and drugs taking. Directed (if that's the
word) by Swiss filmmaker Pierre Koralnik,
Cannabis (a film about love, not
drugs, or so reads the opening caption) does its best to ape the
grittier, more self-consciously stylish crime thrillers coming out of
America in the late 60s, but saddled with the most atrocious script all
it ends up resembling is a self-indulgent mess that can't
help but wallow pathetically in its own inept silliness.
Characterisation is non-existent, so don't ask why Birkin shacks up
with hitman Gainsbourg or why the supposedly ruthless hoods who are
after Gainbourg's skin are so incapable of doing their job. Gainsbourg
is not the only pop legend to be sacrificed on this bloody altar of
mediocrity - Paul Nicholas (in his first film role) gets well and truly
filleted as one of the ad hoc characters that gets randomly thrown into
the incoherent mess that purports to be a plot. Gainsbourg's
music goes some way to redeeming the film, but not enough to make it a
worthwhile viewing experience. There's only so many times you can
watch Gainsbourg pawing Birkin's more intimate regions before you
become nauseous.
Cannabis
is a trip without a destination.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Serge Morgan is a hitman in the employ of the American Mafia. Having fulfilled his latest contract,
he takes a plane to Paris. En route, he meets Jane, the daughter of a wealthy ambassador.
On his arrival at Orly airport, Morgan is wounded by the henchmen of drugs baron Henri
Emery. With Jane's help, he avoids capture and is soon caught up in a passionate
love affair...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.