Film Review
Théodore et Cie is a
routine 1930s French comedy, adapted from a stage play by Paul Armont
and Nicolas Nancey, which is only just salvaged by the combined comedic
talents of Albert Préjean and Raimu. Having only recently
been elevated to stardom, both actors could afford to squander their
efforts on middling crowd-pleasers such as this before more worthy work
came their way later in the decade. The plot falls back on the
hackneyed device of mistaken identity, which is carried to ludicrous
extremes in a desperate attempt to make it funny (which it
isn't). The humour lies elsewhere - mainly in Raimu's disguises,
which become increasingly fantastic as the film progresses. One
minute Raimu is a regency factotum, the next he is a fireman, and then
(incredibly) dragged up to become a dead-ringer for Françoise
Rosay in her seventies. The charade ends with Raimu blacked up
with ping-pong ball eyes - he was presumably intended to be an African
prince but more likely resembles something from a distant galaxy.
Without this (frankly weird) sideshow
Théodore
et Cie would be a pretty dull comedic offering, with repetitive
gags spinning out a predictable plot for far longer than it can
justify. Préjean shows no real aptitude for comedy but,
thankfully, he is cast as the straight man to someone who can extract
the laughs. Raimu was rarely as funny as he is here, even if his
idea of comedy has as much calculated finesse as a stampede of
diarrhoetic elephants.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Pierre Colombier film:
Ces messieurs de la Santé (1934)
Film Synopsis
Théodore, is the nephew of a rich cheese merchant, but rather
than follow an honest career in his uncle Chénerol's business,
he prefers to earn his living by enacting various scams with his
colleague Clodomir. When Chénerol discovers that his wife
Gaby has been carrying on an affair with another man Théodore
sees an opportunity to make some easy money. To save her
marriage, Gaby agrees to pose as a starlet and it is in this guise that
she meets her husband, first at a 'borrowed' apartment, then in a
theatre dressing room. Chénerol is so taken in by this
deception that he falls madly in love with his wife and decides to make
her his mistress!
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.