Film Review
Inside every great actor there is a totally unbridled ham waiting to
get out. At least, this is what Jules Berry and Michel Simon
convince us of as they mug their way through the 1936 comedy
Le Mort en fuite, acting as
disgracefully as pair of hyperactive wolfhounds who have suddenly been
let off the leash in a meat factory. At the time, neither actor
was particularly renowned for the subtlety he brought to his art, but
here they are positively uninhibited, milking every scene for all it is
worth and strength-testing jokes way beyond the margin of safety.
It could have been a monumental disaster but, miraculously, this
anarchic pairing works a treat and
Le
Mort en fuite is just about the funniest thing both actors put
their names to - and probably the closest that either got to appearing
in pantomime.
This overlooked comedy gem was directed by André Berthomieu, a
comparatively minor film director (mostly of lowbow comedies) whose
best work was in the 1940s, including
La
Neige sur les pas (1942) and
L'Ange
de la nuit (1944). Berthomieu's laissez-faire direction
certainly gave Berry and Simon free rein to indulge their wild comedy
excesses but it robs the film of a certain focus and cohesion.
It's as if, during a concert recital, one section of an orchestra
unilaterally decides to ignore the conductor and set the tempo itself -
an impression of manic disarray is bound to ensue. In most
scenes, Berry and Simon's comedy instincts are spot on and
heart-stopping hilarity results, but in a few others the excessive
scenery chewing is taken a little too far and the silliness becomes a
tad tiresome. To see how the film might have ended up without
these two peerless thesps we have only to watch Berthomieu's lacklustre
remake of it,
Les Deux font la paire
(1954), starring Jean Richard and Jean-Marc Thibault. Sometimes
it pays to let the lunatics take over the asylum - but only if you keep
the tranquiliser gun within easy reach, just in case things get totally
out of hand...
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Hector Trignol and Achille Baluchet are two third-rate actors who have
had their fill of bit parts. They agree it is high time they took
top billing, and to that end they concoct a little subterfuge that is
sure to make them both household names. The plan is that Hector
will go into hiding and that Achille will do everything he can to make
it appear he has killed his friend. Once Achille has been
arrested for murder, Hector will suddenly reappear and save him from a
terrible judicial error. With their names plastered all over the
newspapers, no theatre director would dare to offer them a minor part
again! The scheme appears to be foolproof but there is just
one contingency the two actors have not allowed for. Whilst in
hiding, Hector ends up being mistaken for a discredited general in a
central European country. He is fact the exact double of an enemy
of the state and it seems that nothing can prevent him from being tried
and executed as a national traitor. Meanwhile, back in France,
Achille is found guilt of murdering his friend and sentenced to death -
by guillotine!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.