Film Review
By the late 1960s, Brigitte Bardot's star, which had shone so brightly
at the start of the decade, was well and truly on the wane. Her
dwindling popularity with the public and a series of catastrophic box
office failures, coupled with recurring personal difficulties, meant
that she was no longer box office dynamite and, as a result, offers of
work were becoming scarce and increasingly exploitative.
Les Novices was the kind of film
that the actress would probably not even have considered in her glory
days, a lightweight sex comedy that paired her off with another star of
French cinema, one whose career was very much in the ascendant: Annie
Girardot. Not yet ready to step out of the limelight altogether,
Bardot allowed herself to be talked into accepting the lead in
Les Novices, unaware, or perhaps
not even caring, that it would further hasten her impending departure
from the big screen.
Les Novices is one of those
amiable but not particularly bright mainstream comedies that came to
dominate French cinema in the 1970s, in most cases given a thin veneer
of respectability by having a prominent star like Louis de Funès
or Jean-Paul Belmondo take the lead role. By partnering Bardot
with Girardot, the film's producers were hoping to repeat the success
of Louis Malle's
Viva Maria! (1965), in which
Bardot had formed a sublime double act with Jeanne Moreau. Had
Les Novices been directed by
someone of Malle's calibre it might conceivably have worked and ended
up being more than just a series of lewd, loosely cobbled together
sketches. Unfortunately, the problems of a mediocre script were
compounded by a director, Guy Casaril, who lacked experience and
imagination. Casaril made such a bad job of directing the film
that in the end he was replaced by Claude Chabrol, who failed to
salvage the film and refused to allow his name to appear on the credits.
Despite the multiple failings on the scripting and directing fronts,
Les Novices still retains a certain
charm and just about passes for entertainment, redeemed in part by the
spirited contributions from its two indefatigable lead actresses.
Both Bardot and Girardot must have known they were trying to bail out a
sinking ship but they do their best to conceal the fact and give the
film everything they have, extracting laughs from even the most crass
and badly constructed of comic situations. It is almost worth the
cost of the cinema ticket for the one memorable scene in which
Girardot, playing an experienced prostitute, teaches the
green-as-a-cucumber Bardot the art of her trade - it is vaguely
reminiscent of the saucy Bardot-Moreau stage act in Malle's film, and
just as wickedly funny. Not surprisingly, the critics generally
loathed the film and audiences shunned it, hammering yet one more nail
into the coffin of Bardot's short but dazzling acting career.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2013
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Film Synopsis
Sister Agnès has become so bored with her life in a convent that
she decides to run away to Paris. Whilst looking in vain for a
job, she meets Mona Lisa, a kind-hearted prostitute who invites her to
share her way of life. Through her new friend's tutelage,
Agnès learns all the secrets of her new profession, but one
problem leads to another and Agnès ends up looking for more
suitable work. One day, she finds it as an ambulance
driver. Agnès and Mona Lisa take advantage of the
situation by using the ambulance in their prostitution racket.
Very soon, the two woman have the police running after them, and they
end up seeking sanctuary in the last place they expected...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.