Film Review
Screenwriter, producer and film director Léo Joannon started his
career in 1930 and ended up in 1967 with a film called
Les Arnaud starring Bourvil and
Belgian-Italian singer Salvatore Adamo. Between these there was a
diverse mix of films, many successful, featuring such luminaries as
Danielle Darrieux, Pierre Fresnay, Raimu, Jules Berry, Edwige
Feuillère and Annie Girardot. Joannon was not a major film
director but a fair craftsman who made a modest impression on the
cinematographic art. In his oeuvre, we can recall include
Le Carrefour des enfants perdus
(1944) and
L'Homme aux clefs d'or
(1956). We should also remember that in 1951 he directed
Atoll
K, the farewell feature from Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
One of Joannon's more successful productions came on the 2/3/1962, this
comedy-thriller entitled
L'Assassin
est dans l'annuaire, based on the novel
Cet imbecile de Rimoldi by Charles
Exbrayat. The plot is about a bank employee who gets caught up in
the web of a criminal case. Once again, Fernandel takes on the
role of a naive and silly person with whom it is easy to
sympathise. At the time, the actor was 59 years old, and after
three decades in cinema, this was his 129th film, his only
collaboration with Joannon, his long-time friend. At the height
of his popularity thanks to his
Don
Camillo films, the most famous French actor of the moment
returns to his civilian clothes in this likeable film, which offers an
intriguing plot and some crisp dialogue.
The film's critics were quick to point out its failings, however.
According to them, the humour is not as effective as in other Fernandel
films, the plot is hackneyed and the dialogue is a little
dated. Whilst it is true that this film is certainly not a
masterpiece, it does provide an amusing divertissement, an amusing mix
of comedy, melodrama, whodunit and film noir which allows Fernandel to
do what he does best. Admittedly, the film is less
impressive than Julien Duvivier's
L'Homme à l'impermeable
(1957), which is adapted from another Exbrayat novel and also features
Fernandel, perhaps less convincingly in a film noir role.
L'Assassin est dans l'annuaire was
a moderate success on its first release, attracting an audience of 1.6
million, who were no doubt lured by the prospect of seeing Fernandel in
the company of such distinguished actors as Marie Déa (the
illustrous actress seen in Marcel Carne's
Les Visiteurs du soir), Georges
Chamarat, Maurice Teynac, Edith Scob, Henri Crémieux, Noël
Roquevert, Robert dalban... and Léo Joannon himself. I've
just acquired the DVD release of this until now unavailable production,
titled
Cet imbecile de... in
Belgium, after the original title of Exbrayat's novel. Definitely
a film worth rediscovering.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
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Next Léo Joannon film:
Trois enfants... dans le désordre (1966)
Film Synopsis
Albert Rinaldi is a simple bank employee whose naivety makes him an
object of ridicule amongst his colleagues. When a woman named
Jenny fails to keep an appointment with him, he is certain that once
again his colleagues are having a joke at his expense. One day,
his manager asks him to transport a large sum of money, but the van is
attacked and the money is stolen. At first, Albert is accused of
the theft, but he is released when the police fail to find any
proof. The next day, a woman named Jenny is murdered.
Convinced that the robbery and the killing are in some way connected,
Alberts begins his own inquiry, and proves that he is not as stupid as
people seem to think...
© James Travers
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