Film Review
An important producer of the 1930s and 40s, Roger Richebé also
directed a number of films, although only a handful of these stand up
well today.
Monseigneur is
one of the few films directed by Richebé that have stood the
test of time, a wry comedy-drama that pokes fun at the monarchists'
dream of finding a living descendent to the executed King Louis XVI,
the most prominent victim of the French Revolution. A few years
earlier, Richebé had had some fun with the revolutionary era
comedy
Madame Sans-Gêne (1941),
which featured Arletty in one of her best-fitting screen roles.
Before this, the director had taken a sharp satirical axe
to another great French institution, the Académie française, in
L'Habit vert (1937).
Whilst the plot is frankly ridiculous, it was widely believed at the
time the film was made that Louis XVI's son (the uncrowned Louis XVII)
did escape from the Temple, the fortress where he was held prisoner
with his parents - a theory that has since been comprehensively
discredited. The main reason for watching Richebé's film,
other than to refresh and/or test your knowledge of French history, is to
appreciate the performances from two of French cinema's superlative
performers - Bernard Blier and Fernand Ledoux - to say nothing of the fine supporting
cast that includes a stunning Nadia Gray. Carlo Rim's
script also has much to commend it, with plenty of dead pan humour to
make up for the absence of a credible plot. The most memorable scene in
Monseigneur
is a sequence in a waxworks gallery which provides both a potted
history lesson and an excuse for some decidely black humour about the
aptly named Reign of Terror.
The idea that someone of Bernard Blier's physiognomy should be the
rightful heir to the French throne is not as fanciful as it first
appears. The actor bears an uncanny likeness both to Louis XVI
and his son, and, who knows, some document may turn up in a few
centuries to prove that Blier was indeed the great grandson of Louis
XVII! As was often the case at the stage in his career,
Blier is cast as the innocent Joe in a cruel game of deception,
superbly matched by Ledoux, excellent, as ever, in another of his
ambiguous character roles. The film is too silly to take
seriously, but the performances are effortlessly entertaining.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Louis Mennechain, a modest Parisian locksmith, can hardly believe his
ears when an amiable historian named Piétrefond reveals that he
is the direct descendent of King Louis XVI and therefore the rightful
king of France. After undertaking extensive research,
Piétrefond produces a number of documents that leave no doubt as
to Mennechain's claim to the French throne. The locksmith must
give up his simple life and assume the title that Fate has thrust in
his direction. Not long after Mennechain has begun to grow
accustomed to his new life amongst France's nobility, Piétrefond
claims the reward he believes he is owed...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.