Film Review
After starting his directorial career with two fairly undistinguished thrillers
-
Les Impures (1955) and
Vous
pigez? (1955) - Pierre Chevalier had greater success with film comedy
by teaming up with Fernand Raynaud, one of France's most popular comedians
in the 1950s and '60s. Raynaud's short-lived film career had got off
to a flying start with two films directed by Guy Lefranc -
La Bande à papa (1955)
and
Fernand Cow-boy (1956).
After first working with the talented comedian on
Fernand clochard
(1957) Chevalier hooked up with him again for
Le Sicilien, a potty
parody of the gangster film that was enjoying a surge of popularity in France
after the success of Jacques Becker's
Touchez pas au grisbi
(1954) and Jules Dassin's
Du Rififi chez les hommes
(1955).
Le Sicilien is one of Fernand Raynaud's most successful screen outings
(many of his other films are badly written and fail to do justice to the
comedian's talents). Even though the plot is obviously recycled and
many of the gags a little too predictable, Raynaud makes the film an enjoyable
romp, bringing to it the eccentricity, goofy charm and unflagging flair for
comedy that made him such a well-loved stage performer. There are no
showy stars to distract from the lead actor (except for the glamorous Pascale
Roberts, a perfect femme fatale for the idiot couturier who is mistaken for
a paid killer), so Raynaud is the film's focus throughout, and for the most
part it feels like a one-man show, of the kind that made him such a big star
in France.
Low on original plot ideas but brimming with gags, which are brilliantly
executed by Raynaud, the script is owed to Jean Girault, who later became
one of France's most commercially successful film directors through his many
associations with a subsequent comedy icon, Louis de Funès, including
Le Gendarme de Saint-Tropez
(1964). Some of the madness that takes over several de Funès
comedies is to be found in
Le Sicilien, which has echoes of another
de Funès vehicle,
Le Corniad
(1965). The gangster parody became a hugely popular genre in French
cinema of the 1960s, thanks mainly to the success of Georges Lautner's
Les Tontons flingueurs
(1963). It is curious that whilst
Le Sicilien predates this
much lauded comedy classic by five years and serves up a similar humour-laden
pastiche, it is all but forgotten.
Fernand Raynaud's star faded too quickly after his untimely death in 1973.
Whilst his films rarely showed him at his best, they continue to be good
family entertainment and help to preserve the memory of one of France's best-loved
comedy performers. The sequence in the restaurant, in which Raynaud
is forced to down two four-course meals whilst zipping back and forth between
two tables (to the ever-growing consternation of Paul Préboist) would
have been tedious if played by a less capable comic, but Raynaud turns it
into a comedy tour de force. Unfairly overlooked for too long,
Le
Sicilien definitely deserves a fresh reappraisal.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In Paris, a criminal gang led by Monsieur Bruno is awaiting the arrival of
an Italian hitman who is known only as the Sicilian. Unfortunately,
the professional killer is arrested as soon as he gets off the train at the Gare de Lyon
and his distinctive white hat is unwittingly picked up by a fellow passenger.
The latter is Fernand, a fashion designer from Lyon who has come to Paris
to present his new collection. He had arranged to be picked up at the
station by his friend Henri, the brother of his fiancée Josée,
but instead he is met by a strange young woman, Olga. Mistaking him
for the Sicilian, Olga forces him into her car and takes him to meet her
criminal associates at their den, a seedy Parisian bar named Le Rouge Gorge.
Convinced that this is to be the venue for his fashion show, Fernand immediately
enlists the hoodlums' help in redecorating it. Still convinced that
Fernand is Italy's most deadly paid assassin, the crooks do as they are instructed,
believing that the renovated bar is to be the perfect cover for what will
become Paris's biggest drugs distribution centre. The mutual misunderstanding
continues for several days, and it is only after meeting with Bruno's rival
gangster Beau-Parleur that Fernand begins to suspect something is amiss.
This is the point at which the real Sicilian shows up, and his temper is
not helped when he learns that someone has been impersonating him.
It is only by pretending to be an even nastier piece of work that Fernand
will escape with his pride and his internal organs intact...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.