Film Review
This engaging comedy appears to have been tailor-made for Fernandel, allowing the popular
comic actor to turn in one of his most sympathetic and convincing performances.
It is one of a handful of films featuring the horse-faced comedian which has stood the
test of time, thanks to a decent script and some good production values. Fernandel's
co-stars include a young Michel Galabru, who would became famous as Louis de Funès's
long-suffering side-kick in the
Gendarmes films of the 1960s and the great
stage and film actress Arletty, best known for her part in Marcel Carné's 1945
film
Les
Enfants du paradis. This was to be Arletty's last film appearance - while
she was working on this film she was practically blind, following an accident earlier
in the year, an accident which tragically curtailed a remarkable acting career.
Le Voyage à Biarritz was the third
- and arguably the best - of six films that Fernandel made under the direction of Gilles
Grangier between 1946 and 1966. The film is memorable for many reasons - a poignant
story about the relationship between a father and his son, Fernandel's innate talent for
switching between farce and pathos at the drop of a hat (changing the mood of the film
greatly as he does so), and some great comic moments. A very young Anna Massey
- probably the last person you would expect to find in a Fernandel film - makes a fleeting
appearance as a quintessentially English girl. It was her third film role, and came
immediately after her part in Michael Powell's controversial
Peeping
Tom (1960).
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Gilles Grangier film:
Maigret voit rouge (1963)
Film Synopsis
For twenty years, station master Guillaume Dodut has dreamt of taking a holiday with his
wife and son in the seaside town of Biarritz. For twenty years, he has had to put
off the holiday to pay for his son's education. When, aged 24, his son Charles passes
his engineering exams in England, Guillaume can at last fulfil his dream and makes preparations
for the long-awaited holiday. When he wins a one-day trip to London, Guillaume
is delighted because he will be able to meet his son before returning home to France.
However, Charles is none too keen to be seen with his father and so manages to avoid meeting
him. Charles is ashamed of his origins and fears that neither his employer nor his
new girlfriend, Marjorie, will be impressed to learn that he is the son of a railway employee...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.