Film Review
It is interesting to speculate how director Jean Girault's career would
have fared if he had not had the good fortune to work with a comic
colossus of the stature of Louis de Funès, who starred in the
majority of his films.
Le
Permis de conduire, one of the few films Girault made that was
not fronted by de Funès, or indeed any big name actor, leaves us
in no doubt that Girault was a mediocre film director who struck
lucky. His one strength was that he gave his most talented
performers free reign to maximise the comic potential of his films, but
in those films of his where there is a deficit of talent on the acting
front, he was seriously exposed and in danger of turning out a Grade A
turkey.
Scripted by Girault's faithful long-term collaborator, Jacques Vilfrid,
Le Permis de conduire starts
with a promising premise but too quickly degenerates into a series of
predictable and hackneyed comic situations, most of which appear to
have been copied wholesale from other films of this period. As
the lead actor, Louis Velle does a reasonable job at holding it all
together, but what the film needs is a more charismatic and amusing
comic actor to prevent the recycled gags from falling flat all the
time. The lacklustre cast merely highlights the dearth of
original ideas in the script and whilst the film is momentarily funny
in parts, it is a chore to sit through. The one reward for
watching the film is an unexpected cameo appearance by New Wave
director Claude Chabrol - it is as surprising as Alfred Hitchcock
suddenly popping up in a
Confessions
or
Carry On film.
Le Permis de conduire may be the
cinematic equivalent of a motorway pileup but it was a massive hit at
the French box office in 1974, attracting an audience of 2.3
million. But then, dangerous driving is a national pastime in
France...
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Girault film:
Les Murs ont des oreilles (1974)
Film Synopsis
Michel Martenot, a modest bank employee in the suburbs of Paris, has a
chronic aversion to cars. Despite being pressurised by his wife,
two children and his interfering brother-in-law, he has no desire to
learn how to drive. But when Michel is promoted to a manager
position at a branch in the centre of Paris, he has no choice but to
take his driving test. He turns out to be such a bad motorist
that he has no chance of passing his test, but he manages to save face
when another hopeless driver, an attractive woman who somehow lures him
into bed with her, gives him a fake licence. All is well until
Michel comes across a pregnant woman who is on the point of giving
birth in the street. He has no choice but to drive the woman as
quickly as he can to hospital, but with a fake licence in his pocket he
is tempting providence, and providence is a fickle mistress...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.