Film Review
Despite some very funny moments, this film is really little more than a pretty mediocre
romantic farce. It is almost embarrassing to watch such luminaries of French cinema
as Charles Boyer, Henri Vidal and Brigitte Bardot trying to make something of such a lacklustre
script. That the film stands up at all is largely due to their combined efforts.
Brigitte Bardot in particular shows a natural flair for comedy and offers a generally
pleasing performance.
The film would have worked better as a send-up to the kind of shallow overly sentimental
films that were pouring out of Hollywood at the time. Unfortunately, it seems more
concerned with poking fun at the bourgeois elite without offering anything original.
The film resorts too willingly to cheap belly-laughs and inept one-liners which undermine
the credibility of the piece.
The Bardot-Vidal cross-fire is amusing, but never quite believable, and how even Brigitte
Bardot could so easily entrap a foreign prince stretches credulity to breaking point.
Still, if you don't take the film at all seriously and are after some harmless light entertainment,
it should not be too much of a disappointment.
© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Michel Boisrond film:
Faibles femmes (1959)
Film Synopsis
Brigitte Laurier, the remarkably good-looking daughter of the present Prime
Minister of France, is used to getting her own way. When she falls
in love with Michel Legrand, her father's principal secretary, she is determined
to marry him, even though he shows her no encouragement and has no interest
in her. Undeterred, Brigitte turns a chance meeting between Michel
and his former mistress Caroline to her advantage and, to avoid a scandal,
Michel has no choice but to make Brigitte his wife. Brigitte's hopes
that marriage would turn her reluctant beau idéal into a devoted husband
prove to be misguided. Aware of Michel's former reputation as a Casanova
she suspects he is seeing other women, so to get her own back she decides
to make him jealous - by throwing herself at the first man that comes by.
As luck would have it, that man happens to be Prince Charles, the consort
of a country that is a close ally of France, during an official state visit.
The prince proves to be far from immune to Brigitte's obvious charms...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.