Le Temps des oeufs durs (1958) Directed by Norbert Carbonnaux
Comedy
aka: Hardboiled Egg Time
Film Review
Hardly recognisable as the work of the man who directed the enjoyably
daft Candide ou l'optimisme au XXe siècle
(1960), this insipid comedy struggles to raise so much as a grudging
titter, in spite of having a cast replete with comic prowess. Norbert
Carbonnaux's brand of anarchic comedy is best utilised on films that
are essentially plotless; in Le
Temps des oeufs durs, which is plot heavy, his humour is
smothered to death almost from the word go. Heaven alone
knows how Darry Cowl became one of the most popular comedians in France
- what he passes off for comedy is (to this reviewer at least) only
marginally less painful to endure than having a wisdom tooth extracted
without an aesthetic. The infinitely more talented Fernand
Gravey, Pierre Mondy and Jacques Dufilho help to provide some relief
from the endlessly irritating Cowl, but their efforts are pretty well
wasted on what is no more than a tedious distraction for masochists
with an exceedingly high boredom threshold.
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Garage attendant Louis Stainval is a shy daydreamer with no money.
One day, he wins a large sum of money via the national lottery and
decides to spice up his life. He prevents a failed artist named
Raoul Grandvivier from killing himself and takes him home. Here,
Louis meets Raoul's beautiful daughter Lucie and immediately falls in
love. So that he can go on seeing Lucie, Louis pays frequent
calls on Raoul, ostensibly to buy his paintings. The
paintings are so bad that Louis just throws them into the river
Seine. Because he has found someone to buy his work, Raoul begins
to believe that he is a serious painter. This misunderstanding
will cause a great deal of trouble...
Script: Willy Pickardt,
Serge de Boissac,
Norbert Carbonnaux
Cinematographer: Roger Dormoy
Music: Francis Lopez
Cast:Fernand Gravey (Raoul Gandvivier),
Darry Cowl (Louis Stainval),
Béatrice Altariba (Lucie Grandvivier),
Pierre Mondy (Le maître nageur),
Jacques Dufilho (Jules Grandvivier),
Gaby Basset (Martine Grandvivier),
Denise Carvenne (La caissière du café),
Daniel Emilfork (L'expert en tableaux),
Albert Michel (M. Charretier),
Bernard Musson (Le commissaire),
Gaston Orbal (Le client du taxi de l'avenue Kléber),
Jack Ary (Le vendeur d'oreillers),
Christian Brocard (Le livreur de poissons),
Émile Genevois (L'homme qui repêche Raoul de l'eau),
Hubert de Lapparent (Le serveur de la brasserie),
Marcel Loche (Le gardien de prison),
Jacques Marin (Le pêcheur),
Max Montavon (L'expert en billets de banque),
Julienne Paroli (La tante de Raoul),
Sylvain (Le peintre en bâtiment)
Country: France
Language: French
Support: Black and White
Runtime: 75 min
Aka:Hardboiled Egg Time
The very best of the French New Wave
A wave of fresh talent in the late 1950s, early 1960s brought about a dramatic renaissance in French cinema, placing the auteur at the core of France's 7th art.
Since the 1920s, Hollywood has dominated the film industry, but that doesn't mean American cinema is all bad - America has produced so many great films that you could never watch them all in one lifetime.