Film Review
Gérard Pirès is best known as the director of
Taxi
(1998), the first (and best) in a series of phenomenally successful
turbo-charged comedies produced by Luc Besson. This film
marked Pirès's belated return to directing after more than a
decade working in advertising (he is reputed to have made around 400
publicity films). The irony of this is that in his first feature,
Erotissimo (1969),
Pirès delivered the most virulent attack on the demon art of
advertising. Not content with gunning down the ad men with a
Tarantino-like ferocity, the film also sinks its razor-sharp fangs into
the sexploitation phenomenon that erupted in the mid-60s, whilst making
the usual anti-establishment noises you would expect to find in a
French comedy of this era. This was, after all, a film made in
the turbulent year of 1968, so it was unlikely to end up looking like
an episode of
Terry and June
(or whichever bland middleclass sitcom you'd care to name).
One of the most important producers of the Nouvelle Vague, Pierre
Braunberger was the obvious backer for Pirès's eccentric debut
feature, particularly as it resembled something by one of his most
prominent protégés, Jean-Luc Godard. With its
frenzied jump cutting, vivid use of pop art and general sense of
unbridled lunacy,
Erotissimo
could easily be mistaken for one of Godard's films, and the only thing
that convinces us otherwise is its
total
lack of restraint. Not even Godard, in his wilder moments, could
have put together something as zanily anarchic as this. It's also
much funnier than any film that this pillar of the French New
Wave ever unleashed on us, but then, to be fair, Godard never got to
direct a film with Jean Yanne and Francis Blanche, two of French
cinema's comedy icons. (Not long before this, Yanne had featured
in Godard's
Week End, a somewhat bleaker
anti-everything romp.)
For a film that is so stylistically over the top, it seems scarcely
plausible that it essentially boils down to a straightforward comedy in
which an insecure housewife - Annie Girardot at her comedic best -
tries to spice up her marriage with a businessman - Jean Yanne - whose
attentions are presently being monopolised by his tax inspector -
Francis Blanche. (Put like that, it sounds uncannily like an
episode of
Terry and June...)
Stimulated by some lurid posters, a brand of cooking fat (
extra virgin, of course) and a very
dodgy Swedish movie (in which incest is promoted as the next in-thing),
Girardot surrenders herself to the new era of permissiveness and
becomes a rampant sexpot. Unfortunately, Yanne is too busy
dealing with his muddled tax affairs to profit from his wife's sexual
liberation, so Girardot ends up having a meaningless fumble with Italian
stud Venantino Venantini whilst Yanne spends his evenings ploughing
through invoices and feeding baby food to Blanche. It could only
happen in a French film of the 1960s.
The high point is when Girardot puts on her riding gear and sings a sexy
musical number entitled
La femme
faux-cils. (If only this had been entered into the 1969
Eurovision song contest it would have given France a decisive victory,
instead of the four-way tie with Britain, the Netherlands and
Spain. Next to Girardot's kinky number, complete with riding
crop, Lulu's
Boom Bang-a-Bang
wouldn't have got a look in.) Whilst we're on the musical theme,
Serge Gainsbourg makes a brief cameo appearance as a fully paid up
member of the 'dirty mac' brigade, although his attempts to lure
Girardot back to his place to see his collection of 'art' films prove
futile. It was around this time that Gainsbourg released his most
notorious single with Jane Birkin -
Je
t'aime, moi non plus. Soixante-neuf really
was a filthy year.
To gain a full appreciation of what things were like in France in the
late 1960s, you could either go to the time and expense of building
yourself a time machine or you could just sit down and watch
Erotissimo. With its Gatling
gun editing, psychedelic score and retina-scorching use of colour,
Pirès's film positively wallows in the trippy tastelessness of
its time, but it provides a stinging critique of the decade's tawdry
commercialism, evidenced by its blatant sexualisation of women and
nauseous permissiveness. There is also a palpable sense of the
numbing alienation that was felt by most of the population at the time,
as the De Gaulle presidency came tumbling down and the establishment
and commerce became easy targets for a disillusioned and
disenfranchised nation. How France managed to avoid descending
into outright anarchy is anyone's guess, but Pirès's madcap film gives
a real sense of how close the country came to this.
© James Travers 2015
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Next Gérard Pirès film:
Fantasia chez les ploucs (1971)