La Ville-bidon (1973) Directed by Jacques Baratier
Drama / Documentary
Film Review
Jacques Baratier's caustic commentary on the dubious re-housing schemes
that were endemic in France in the 1970s ruffled more than a few
feathers on its initial release in 1976 and the rightwing press was
quick to condemn it for its obvious political bias. Critical
reaction to the film was predictably mixed although it was generally
praised for drawing attention to an important social issue.
Baratier's attempts to make a similar film for French television a few
years previously had been thwarted by an outright ban, and this perhaps
gives some indication of how widespread graft and corruption was in
France's building industry in the early 70s.
Somewhere between documentary and fictional drama, La Ville bidon is a cheeky but
pretty astute critique on the failed housing policies of the French
government, which saw those at the lower end of the social spectrum
dumped in low quality high rise apartments (HLMs) that were barely
suitable for animals. The criminal, self-serving alliance between
politicians and property developers that was rife in France in the
1970s is humorously represented by the dodgy dealings of a deputy mayor
and an estate agent, whose greed and hypocrisy seem to be without
bound. Baratier gives his film an added sense of realism by
using non-professional actors (including families living on the site
under development) as well as recognisable professional actors
(Bernadette Lafont and Daniel Duval). Whilst the film painfully
lacks structure and sometimes comes across as clumsily didactic, it
argues its case effectively and is enjoyably frank and off-beat.
It also leaves you wondering whether anything has changed since the
film was made.
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Film Synopsis
With the help of an architect and a real estate agent, a deputy mayor
plans to build a new town on a site that is presently occupied by a
slum and a rubbish tip. Buying the tip presents no problem - a
few back-handers and the deal is done. All that remains is to
expel the tenants from their slum properties. Surprised by the
opposition that comes his way, the deputy mayor hires a sociologist to
carry out a study into the benefits the new town will bring, such as
improved living conditions for the poor. As he begins
interviewing the present inhabitants of the site, the sociologist
discovers more than he bargained for...
Script: Jacques Baratier,
Christiane Rochefort,
Daniel Duval
Cinematographer: Ghislain Cloquet
Music: Michel Legrand
Cast:Bernadette Lafont (Fiona),
Daniel Duval (Mario),
Jean-Pierre Darras (M. Brunet),
Claude Jaeger (Le promoteur),
Pierre Schaeffer (L'architecte),
Jacques Baratier (Le sociologue),
Roland Dubillard (Le gardien de la cité),
Robert Castel (Le pied-noir),
Lucien Bodard (Le député-maire),
Xavier Gélin (Un jeune cadre),
Yvan Lagrange (Philippe),
Nicole Karen (La femme du jeune cadre),
Corinne Gorse (Zette),
Françoise Lebrun (Lolotte),
Jean-Paul Rousselet (Clovis),
Michèle Rameau (Michèle),
Jean-Claude Fortin (Léon),
André Voisin (L'ingénieur),
Davye Heastley (La 'qualité de la vie'),
Françoise Choay (Les 'affaires sociales')
Country: France / West Germany
Language: French
Support: Color
Runtime: 88 min
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