Mon frangin du Sénégal (1953) Directed by Guy Lacourt
Comedy
Film Review
Despite his resemblance to Buster Keaton (which he flaunts shamelessly
in this film) Raymond Bussières fails to have much of an impact
in this hopelessly pedestrian comedy. Borrowing the fictitious
twin brother device that Fernandel had used to far better effect in Raphaël le tatoué
(1939), Mon frangin du
Sénégal feels like a lukewarm compendium of
recycled ideas, the lack of originality shown by Norbert Carbonnaux in
the script writing department suitably matched by Guy Lacourt in his
direction (you can see why he directed only two films and devoted most of
his career to production management).
Bussières was a reasonably talented actor but a pretty mediocre
comic and here he proves how ill-equipped he was to carry a comedy by
himself. Dull and formulaic, the film only comes to life when
Louis de Funès shows up (all too briefly) and subjects us to
another of his hilarious character turns - this time he plays a
short-sighted and totally inept doctor. The film's other notable
comedy performers - Noël Roquevert, Paulette Dubost and Paul
Demange - are completely wasted and, lacking de Funès' unceasing
flair for invention, they do little to alleviate the all-enveloping
sense of ennui that spews from Carbonnaux's third rate script like lava
from a volcano. Not even the presence of Louis de Funès in
cracking form can make up for the life-sapping tedium of this still
born comedy.
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Film Synopsis
Jules Pinson, a photographer, is madly in love with Annette, a grocer's
daughter, but she has no interest in him. It is action heroes, of
the kind she sees on the screen at the local cinema, that set Annette's
heart fluttering, not dullards like Jules. In the end, Jules has
no option but to invent a twin brother César, an adventurer who
hunts lions in Africa. In the guise of César, Jules has no
difficulty luring Annette into his arms, but when a lion escapes from a
nearby zoo he has a job living up to his supposed
reputation...
Cast:Raymond Bussières (Jules Pinson),
Annette Poivre (Annette Bridoux),
Noël Roquevert (L'épicier Bridoux),
Paulette Dubost (Séraphine),
Paul Demange (Le colonel),
Marcelle Arnold (Mlle Angèle),
Jacques Fabbri (Le brigadier de gendarmerie),
Sophie Sel (Mlle Sophie),
Irène Bréor (La chanteuse),
Gisèle Grandpré (La maman),
Lud Germain (Le Noir engagé comme commis),
Martine Beauvais (La dame au petit chien),
Louis Viret (Le monsieur qui pose des affiches),
Samson (Le lion),
Louis de Funès (Le docteur),
Franck Maurice (Un ancien rabatteur),
Albert Michel (Le gendarme de la route),
Eugène Stuber (Un ancien rabatteur),
Gabrielle Fontan
Country: France
Language: French
Support: Black and White
Runtime: 87 min
The very best of French film comedy
Thanks to comedy giants such as Louis de Funès, Fernandel, Bourvil and Pierre Richard, French cinema abounds with comedy classics of the first rank.
Science-fiction came into its own in B-movies of the 1950s, but it remains a respected and popular genre, bursting into the mainstream in the late 1970s.
From Jean Renoir to François Truffaut, French cinema has no shortage of truly great filmmakers, each bringing a unique approach to the art of filmmaking.