Film Review
Between his last two directorial efforts for cinema -
Manon des sources (1953) and
Les Lettres de mon moulin
(1954) - Marcel Pagnol scripted this lively comedy for his own
production company, based on a popular stage play by Emile Mazaud. It was a happy reunion for Pagnol with the comic
actor Fernandel, who had recently excelled himself in
Topaze
(1951), Pagnol's remake of an earlier film based on one of his earliest
plays. Pagnol ceded the directing duties to Henri Verneuil, an
up-and-coming filmmaker who had already put Fernandel's comedic and
dramatic talents to good use in
La Table aux crevés
(1952) and
Le Fruit défendu (1952).
Carnaval deals lightly, if not
scurrilously, with a subject that was, at the time, considered serious,
namely marital infidelity, and was considered shocking in some
quarters. The spectacle of Fernandel waving a banner proclaiming
him as a 'first class cuckold' is not one that most fans of the comic
actor would have expected to see, nor is the sight of the comedian
standing on a carnival float of horn-adorned cuckolds and singing a
cheerful number that begins "Cocus de France et de Navarre, salut,
cocus de monde entier". It is hard to know which is less
plausible - that Fernandel should star in such a risqué film, or
that Pagnol should have deigned to pen it. Suffice it to say that
it is not the most glorious episode in the career of either man.
Pagnol's penchant for long chatty scenes does to tend to make the film
more cumbersome and heavy going than it deserves to be, with the result
that many of the best gags get drowned in a sea of pointless
verbiage. Fortunately, the film boasts a sufficiently talented
cast to prevent the whole thing ending up as either a vulgar comedy or
a tedious word-a-thon. Fernandel is on cracking form (as he
invariably was in Pagnol's films) and is at his best when sparring off
Pagnol's wife at the time, the loveably feisty Jacqueline
Bouvier. Saturnin Fabre and Pauline Carton both lend enormous
lustre to the film, and you can't help regretting the fact that they
had not been given a
much
greater part in the proceedings.
Carnaval is by no means a career
highpoint for Fernandel, Pagnol or Verneuil, but it is an enjoyable
departure from their respective norms.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Henri Verneuil film:
L'Ennemi public no 1 (1953)
Film Synopsis
Dardamelle, an architect living in Aix-en-Provence, is blissfully unaware that his wife,
Francine, is having an affair with another man. When Dardamelle refuses to buy her
a new dress, Francine reveals her secret - and is totally unprepared for her husband's
reaction. Instead of taking offence, Dardamelle goes overboard to publicise
the news, and starts by hanging a banner with the words 'First class cuckold'
from his balcony. The architect then forms a society for cheated husbands
and intends that his wife's infidelity will form the star attraction at the rapidly approaching
carnival...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.