Film Review
Rip-roaring comedy is not the genre that springs most readily to mind
when the name Henri Decoin is mentioned, but even the most serious of
film directors like to let their hair down from time to time and,
interspersed between Decoin's grimmer studies of human nature, there
are some surprisingly lighter offerings.
Mademoiselle ma mère is one
of Decoin's liveliest and most delightful comedies, a frothy confection
that was clearly intended to show off the comedic talents of the
director's then wife and muse, Danielle Darrieux at her most dizzyingly
uninhibited. Based on a play of the same play title by Louis
Verneuil, the film was scripted by Jean Boyer (who directed a fair
number of crowdpleasers of this ilk) and any resemblance to American
screwball comedies of the time is of course purely deliberate. As
rip-offs go, this one is gloriously brazen.
A non-stop succession of comic escapades which ultimately comes to
resemble a compendium of the greatest Hollywood comedies of the 30s and
40s,
Mademoiselle ma mère
could hardly be more different from Decoin and Darrieux's previous
collaboration, the ponderous melodrama
Le
Domino vert (1936). From the get go, the 19-year-old
Darrieux looks as if she is in her element (or else doing her best to
be certified), and she could not be more animated if she were to suffer
a severe attack of Saint Vitus' dance whilst being wired up to the
French electricity grid. André Alerme, who gets to play
Darrieux's husband of convenience, must have risked a coronary
perfoming at the same level as his hyper-energetic co-star and,
larger-than-life character though he was, he was never funnier than he
is here. Of course, the idea that someone as young and
vivacious as Danielle Darrieux could ever contemplate marrying a man as
old as Alerme is too preposterous to be credible for a moment - at
least it would be were it not for the fact she had just married a
man 27 years her senior in real life!
Before he became the French directors' villain of choice and made
scenery chewing his favourite hobby, Pierre Brasseur was popular at the
start of his career as the juvenile lead, and it is in this humble
capacity that he proves a suitable foil for Darrieux - certainly it's
hard to imagine any other French actor of his age getting away with
lifting the feisty lead actress off her feet and carrying her across
the set like an unwanted piece of furniture. With some more
seasoned comedy performers (Pierre Larquey, Fred Pasquali and Marcel
Simon) on hand to help keep up the exhilarating pace of the film,
Mademoiselle ma mère doesn't
flag for a second and the gags just keep coming. This is French
film entertainment in its most dangerously concentrated form, and once
you've seen it you can hardly wait to watch it all over again.
Given his obvious penchant for making audiences laugh, it seems odd
that Decoin would shy away from comedy for most of his career - indeed
the only other film he made that is as funny as this one is his
Occupation era romp
Je suis avec toi (1943).
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Henri Decoin film:
Abus de confiance (1937)
Film Synopsis
In her search for the perfect husband, Jacqueline Vignolle is slowly
driving her parents to distraction. After fourteen failed
engagements, Jacqueline still hasn't found her
beau idéal, and so she
decides to marry the next eligible man she meets. This turns out
to be Albert Letournel, a fifty-something widower with as much spark as
a dilapidated headstone. The wedding goes ahead, under the
disapproving gaze of Letournel's son Georges, who is older than his
new stepmother. Naturally, the marriage proves to be a
disaster. Jacqueline's loathing for her husband and his son
drives her to elope with another man. Determined to give
Jacqueline a piece of his mind, Georges runs after her. Their
confrontation does not go quite as planned. In fact, Georges and
his stepmother fall passionately in love...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.