Site icon Random Thoughts

MCMXXXIX XXIV: Fric-Frac

Fric-Frac. Claude Autant-Lara & Maurice Lehmann. 1939.

Another French movie! What are the odds!

Very stylish title sequence.

https://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/descend.mp4

Natcherly the French movies we (that is I) see from this era are the indisputable classeec arteest films… but this is an out and out low budged entertaining non-art movie? How exciting!

It’s a comedy about… a heist? Probably?

I’m amused so far.

What! Three of the main actors had “Cher” names? I mean, single word names? Fernandel, Arletty and Andrex? I’m guessing this was a French thing at the time?

Ah, so that’s what they’re talking about:

Javanais is a type of French slang where the extra syllable ⟨av⟩ is infixed inside a word after every consonant that is followed by a vowel, in order to render it incomprehensible. Some common examples are gros ([ɡʁo], “fat”) which becomes gravos ([ɡʁavo]); bonjour ([bɔ̃ʒuʁ], “hello”‘), which becomes bavonjavour ([bavɔ̃ʒavuʁ]); and pénible ([penibl], “annoying”), becomes pavénaviblave ([pavenaviblav]). Paris ([paʁi]) becomes Pavaravis ([pavaʁavi]).

And “bavonjavour” was indeed one of the words he was explaining to the other guy.

This is most amusing. But not actually funny? I’m enjoying myself, though.

It’s such a basic movie. There’s virtually no plot (beyond the heist, which I’m assuming is coming, still), so it’s just solid repartee all the way. That’s cheap — just having these actors trade barbs at each other for fifteen minutes is one scene.

It’s charming. But the jokes could be better.

https://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/nom.mp4

Movie turnaround was shorter in those days:

Filming took place in March and April 1939 at the Laboratoires et Studios Eclair in Épinay-sur-Seine. The film was released in France on 15 June 1939.

I guess they didn’t have to spend a year CGI-ing out Superman’s moustache.

This 2K restoration is very nice. I imagine it looks just like when it was brand new: I mean, look at that shot — the dress looks like it’s solarised.

This movie is still amusing, but it feels like I’ve been watching this for nine hours now, and there’s still a quarter of the movie left.

What I’m saying is that this could have been tighter. A lot tighter.

They’re finally now kinda approaching what we all assumed was going to happen once he mentioned that he worked for a jeweller, like two minutes into the movie?

This movie’s take on love:

That is, being in love, for a man, is all about slapping a woman around.

This blog post is part of the 1939
series
.

Exit mobile version