Film Review
Just as French cinema was going through its most significant upheaval for decades, FBI
agent Lemmy Caution made a welcome return to cinema screens after an absence of nearly
five years. Forget the French New Wave; we are back in the safe, familiar world
of sauve secret agents, svelte and seductive women, guns and fist fights. In short,
welcome back to the camp-macho world of the American B-movie, custom-made for a French
audience.
Eddy Constantine clearly relishes the part he made his own, an indestructible, indefatiguable,
relentlessly insouchiant action hero with a disarming smile and an almost surreal sense
of irony. In contrast to the earlier films in the Lemmy Caution series
(
La Môme vert-de-gris,
Les Femmes s'en balancent),
Comment qu'elle est! has no pretensions of being a serious thriller and spends most
of its time laughing at itself, and indeed the policier genre in general. The film
manages to retain some of the old B-movie magic but also has enough comedy to make it
entertaining without becoming overtly silly.
Lemmy Caution would not escape the tender mercies of the French New Wave directors for long, however. Five years later, a certain
Monsieur Jean-Luc Godard would give him his most bizarre assignment ever - in
the bizarre world of
Alphaville...
© James Travers 2004
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Bernard Borderie film:
Le Caïd (1960)
Film Synopsis
FBI agent Lemmy Caution arrives from the USA, his mission to uncover a dangerous spy
named Varley. The French secret services, led by the anti-American General Rupert,
are engaged on the same assignment and agree reluctantly to work with him. Caution's
investigation leads him to a seductive woman art dealer, just as a fellow agent, Charlie
Ribban, is murdered. When he realises Varley's identity, the redoubtable FBI
agent lays a trap to capture him, with the help of the General's niece…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.