Pour 100 briques t'as plus rien... (1982) Directed by Edouard Molinaro
Drama
aka: For 200 Grand, You Get Nothing Now
Film Review
Daniel Auteuil and Gérard Jugnot make a terrific comic double act in this inspired
thriller parody from director Edouard Molinaro. Whilst the film takes a while to
get into its stride - at first the film looks more like a social drama than a comedy -
it becomes irresistibly funny once the enterprising duo Sam and Paul start making preparations
to rob a bank. The film has great fun parodying conventional thrillers, and the
sight of a balaclava-helmet wearing Gérard Jugnot brandishing a plastic rifle whilst
screaming "Pas de panique!" is not one you are likely to forget in a hurry.
"No one is incorruptible" seems to be the message of this film, inspired no doubt by the
series of high-profile financial scandals that were filling French newspapers in the late
'70s and early '80s.
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Next Edouard Molinaro film: L'Amour en douce (1985)
Film Synopsis
Unable to find work, Sam and Paul decide to hold up a bank. There has been a spate
of bank robberies lately in Paris and one more won't make much difference. Armed
with toy guns, the bank raid begins well enough. However the bank staff are somewhat
unimpressed by their unprofessionalism and give them a few helpful tips. Nicole,
the bank's publicist, was a hostage in a previous robbery and uses her experience to help
Sam and Paul. She assures them that, being so close to Christmas, their ransom demand
will be met and the police will be allow them to escape. She couldn't be more wrong.
The police have had enough of being made to look stupid...
In the 1920s French cinema was at its most varied and stylish - witness the achievements of Abel Gance, Marcel L'Herbier, Jean Epstein and Jacques Feyder.