(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Guignolo, Le Review (1980)
HOME |  CULT MOVIES | COMPETITIONS | ADVERTISE |  CONTACT US |  ABOUT US
 
 
 
Newest Reviews
American Fiction
Poor Things
Thunderclap
Zeiram
Legend of the Bat
Party Line
Night Fright
Pacha, Le
Kimi
Assemble Insert
Venus Tear Diamond, The
Promare
Beauty's Evil Roses, The
Free Guy
Huck and Tom's Mississippi Adventure
Rejuvenator, The
Who Fears the Devil?
Guignolo, Le
Batman, The
Land of Many Perfumes
Cat vs. Rat
Tom & Jerry: The Movie
Naked Violence
Joyeuses Pacques
Strangeness, The
How I Became a Superhero
Golden Nun
Incident at Phantom Hill
Winterhawk
Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City
Maigret Sets a Trap
B.N.A.
Hell's Wind Staff, The
Topo Gigio and the Missile War
Battant, Le
Penguin Highway
Cazadore de Demonios
Snatchers
Imperial Swordsman
Foxtrap
   
 
Newest Articles
3 From Arrow Player: Sweet Sugar, Girls Nite Out and Manhattan Baby
Little Cat Feat: Stephen King's Cat's Eye on 4K UHD
La Violence: Dobermann at 25
Serious Comedy: The Wrong Arm of the Law on Blu-ray
DC Showcase: Constantine - The House of Mystery and More on Blu-ray
Monster Fun: Three Monster Tales of Sci-Fi Terror on Blu-ray
State of the 70s: Play for Today Volume 3 on Blu-ray
The Movie Damned: Cursed Films II on Shudder
The Dead of Night: In Cold Blood on Blu-ray
Suave and Sophisticated: The Persuaders! Take 50 on Blu-ray
Your Rules are Really Beginning to Annoy Me: Escape from L.A. on 4K UHD
A Woman's Viewfinder: The Camera is Ours on DVD
Chaplin's Silent Pursuit: Modern Times on Blu-ray
The Ecstasy of Cosmic Boredom: Dark Star on Arrow
A Frosty Reception: South and The Great White Silence on Blu-ray
You'll Never Guess Which is Sammo: Skinny Tiger and Fatty Dragon on Blu-ray
Two Christopher Miles Shorts: The Six-Sided Triangle/Rhythm 'n' Greens on Blu-ray
Not So Permissive: The Lovers! on Blu-ray
Uncomfortable Truths: Three Shorts by Andrea Arnold on MUBI
The Call of Nostalgia: Ghostbusters Afterlife on Blu-ray
Moon Night - Space 1999: Super Space Theater on Blu-ray
Super Sammo: Warriors Two and The Prodigal Son on Blu-ray
Sex vs Violence: In the Realm of the Senses on Blu-ray
What's So Funny About Brit Horror? Vampira and Bloodbath at the House of Death on Arrow
Keeping the Beatles Alive: Get Back
   
 
  Guignolo, Le The scoundrel's scoundrel
Year: 1980
Director: Georges Lautner
Stars: Jean-Paul Belmonndo, Georges Géret, Carla Romanelli, Von Gretchen Shepard, Mirella D’Angelo, Pierre Vernier, Paolo Bonacelli, Michel Beaune, Tony Kendall, Maurice Auzel, Henry Guybet, Lily Fayol, Philippe Castelli, Charles Gérard, Michel Galabru
Genre: Comedy, Action, AdventureBuy from Amazon
Rating:  6 (from 1 vote)
Review: Fresh out of jail Alexandre Dupré (Jean-Paul Belmondo), professional con artist and thief, is soon plotting his next caper. Disguised as an Indian prince he attempts to swindle a countess out of some valuable jewels only to discover that Sophie (Mirella D'Angelo) is herself a con artist. Instantly smitten the pair become partners, both romantically and criminally in an effort to scam wealthy Duke Helmut Von Nassau (Pierre Vernier). However when the Duke unexpectedly proposes marriage to Sophie, Alexandre winds up bereft of a fortune and his lover and in search of yet another scam. On a plane trip to Venice a stranger convinces Alexandre to carry a suitcase through customs. This same man is later shot dead outside the airport. Suddenly pursued by all manner of spies, violent criminals and femmes fatale, Alexandre tries to stay alive long enough to figure out what the hell is going on while at the same time pull off not one but two cons!

Whether it is gentleman thief Arsene Lupin, fairytale antihero Reynard the Fox or innumerable farces about cheating husbands, the rogue is a much celebrated archetype in French popular culture. With Le Guignolo (actually an Italian slang term for third-rate crook) superstar Jean-Paul Belmondo sought to establish himself as perhaps French cinema's definitive rogue, putting one over on clueless marks, rival crooks, foreign agents, and even the French government. Not to mention charming a panoply of glamorous women into bed. He even shags the Prime Minister's wife! Following their hit cop thriller Flic ou Voyou (1978) Belmondo and director Georges Lautner mounted an elaborate caper comedy showcasing spectacular locations (including ever-picturesque Venice), slick cinematography by the great Henri Decae and, of course, the star's trademark daredevil stunts. Here J.P.B. ploughs his speedboat through a hotel lobby, leaps off a balcony onto a passing barge, dangles from a helicopter and runs amuck in a bread factory. The latter is actually more remarkable than it sounds.

With its part-Venetian setting and emphasis on outrageous gags and action set-pieces over coherent plotting, Le Guignolo is strangely reminiscent of Moonraker (1979). Indeed the spy plot is straight out of a James Bond film only with a fast-talking criminal instead of debonair 007. Nonetheless Belmondo's Alexandre Dupré proves every bit as intrepid and unflappable as well as irresistible to the ladies, albeit with a manic sense of humour goofier even than Roger Moore's Bond (his signature move is to kick an enemy in the bollocks till they howl like a banshee). Elements of the later Pink Panther movies are evident in Lautner's staging of grandiose slapstick sequences while the film also evokes Francis Veber's mistaken identity comedies (e.g. The Tall Blonde Man with One Black Shoe (1972)). The story does take a while to get going but once you wade through its laborious setup (the whole first act with Sophie could easily be removed) things kick into high gear and the results are fantastically entertaining. Arch and witty dialogue supplied by legendary comedy scribe Michel Audiard (co-writing the screenplay with Jean Herman) parodies a specific style of romantic melodrama. Lautner marries this with Belmondo's own very broad, very physical brand of slapstick comedy. While far from subtle his manic energy is infectious and draws big laughs. If the schizophrenic tone results in dramatic elements failing to match the impact of the comic scenes there remains real joy in watching Alexandre somehow talk his way out of one seemingly inescapable situation after another. Philippe Sarde supplies a sublime, elegant score spotlighting legendary harmonica player Toots Thielemans.


Reviewer: Andrew Pragasam

 

This review has been viewed 6835 time(s).

As a member you could Rate this film

 
Review Comments (0)


Untitled 1

Login
  Username:
 
  Password:
 
   
 
Forgotten your details? Enter email address in Username box and click Reminder. Your details will be emailed to you.
   

Latest Poll
Which star probably has psychic powers?
Laurence Fishburne
Nicolas Cage
Anya Taylor-Joy
Patrick Stewart
Sissy Spacek
Michelle Yeoh
Aubrey Plaza
Tom Cruise
Beatrice Dalle
Michael Ironside
   
 
   

Recent Visitors
Mark Le Surf-hall
Darren Jones
Enoch Sneed
  Louise Hackett
Andrew Pragasam
Mary Sibley
Graeme Clark
  Desbris M
   

 

Last Updated: