Film Review
Looking like a zany compendium of excerpts yanked from a series of
Buster Keaton silent shorts,
Les
Rois du sport offers a few moments of hilarity but suffers from
an almost total absence of plot and a wearying lack of imagination on
the writing and directing fronts. As it features the combined
efforts of no less than three
monstres
sacrés of 1930s French cinema - namely Raimu, Fernandel
and Jules Berry - it is hard to see why the film fails to take
off. Individually, the three actors give great value (even if
they are cast in their habitual roles), but when they appear together
on screen (which is most of the time) they are more likely to cancel
one another out than complement each other. Julien Carette is
even more ill-served by this film - he is completely wasted in an
inconsequential supporting role. Apart from the amusement value
that Fernandel offers when he attempts to play the adept sportsman
(which he does far less humorously than Keaton),
Les Rois du sport offers very
little other than mild tedium. Pierre Colombier directed
Fernandel and Raimu (separately) in a number of other lowbrow comedies
of this type, the most enjoyable being
L'École des cocottes
(1935) and
Ignace (1937).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Pierre Colombier film:
Tricoche et Cacolet (1938)
Film Synopsis
Jules and Fernand, two waiters in a Marseilles café, are both keen sports enthusiasts.
They enter the annual waiters' race, which Jules wins. With the prize money, Jules
places a bet on a football match with a boxing manager, Burette. When Jules wins
the bet, Burette disappears, and Jules follows him to Paris to try to recuperate his winnings.
Fernand later arrives in Paris but is mistaken for Burette's star boxer, who is about
to contest a well-publicised match...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.