Summary
Jo Cavalier is the coach for the French boxing team
at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin. On the train to Berlin, he is accosted
by a ten year old Jewish boy, Simon, who asks for his autograph – previously
Jo was a flying hero who served in the flying corps during World War I.
Simon was meant to join his family in Berlin, but when they do not meet
him at the station, Jo takes him under his wing. Simon’s family
have narrowly evaded being arrested by the Nazis, and Jo manages to supply
them with a limousine so that they can escape to Austria. A short
while later, Jo receives a telephone call from a distressed Simon, saying
that his family have just been arrested. Jo comes to the rescue in
a plane supplied by a friendly German officer. Having fended off
armed German soldiers, persistent Gestapo officers and an over-attentive
bear cub, Jo and Simon manage to rescue Simon’s family. Once more,
they head for the Alps, but they take a wrong turning. Instead of
heading for Austria, they end up in Hitler’s secret mountain retreat...
Review
In a similar vein to Oury’s phenomenally successful 1966
film La Grande vadrouille, L’As des as is a lavish action-comedy
set at the time of the Third Reich – this time on the eve of World War
II during the Berlin Olympics of 1936. This film is unashamedly aimed
at the popular mass market but it is, for all that, a very well made film,
with an attention to detail which surpasses the great majority of serious
wartime dramas. Its budget was 40 million French francs (a straggering
sum at the time), but it does look as if much more was spent than that.
Fast
moving, with numerous well-staged action scenes (including a spectacular
dog-fight involving authentic replicas of two WWI aircraft), and benefiting
greatly from a well-written script, with some very funny lines, this is
a hugely entertaining and diverting film. There are a few scenes
where the sentimentality gets steeped a little high, but this is a comparatively
minor blemish in what is a thunderingly good film, genuinely great family
entertainment for the masses. Lovers of cuddly bear cubs will be
particularly pleased. Special credit must go to Rachid Ferrache,
the angelic child actor who plays the Jewish orphan boy - his rapport with
the Rambo-esque Belmondo is something quite special.
You
might think that the subject matter of the film is hardly appropriate for
a comedy. However, Oury has a rare gift for making us see the funny
side of some of humany's worst mistakes, and this is most apparent in this
film. The Nazi regime was built on an utterly warped view of the
world, and Oury merely adds a further level of distortion to show how ludicrous
the Nazis were, particularly before their expansionist ambitions were revealed
to the world. Having the same actor playing both Hitler and his embittered
sister is a wonderful touch, providing the best example of many where Hitler
is deservedly ridiculed in this film.
Not
surprisingly, given that it stars Jean-Paul Belmondo, France’s most popular
actor at the time, the film was a huge success, attracting nearly half
a million viewers in its first week in Paris alone (a record at the time),
with over 70 thousand on the first day alone. In total, the film
sold nearly five and half million tickets in France, making this Belmondo’s
most successful film (roughly equal with Le Cerveau, a.k.a. The
Brain, Oury’s first collaboration with Belmondo).
The
film’s popularity antagonised the critics, who lambasted the film for stealing
the potential audience for other films, most notably Jacques Demy’s Une
chambre en ville, which was released at the same time as L’As des
as.
One
amusing anecdote about the making of this film concerns the spectacular
chase scene where Belmondo and the young Rachid Ferrache are being pursued
in their car by armed German soldiers on motorbikes. In this
scene, Belmondo was to apparently hand over the steering wheel to Rachid,
so that he could climb into the car’s back seat to remove some spare car
tyres which he could then throw in the path of the German soldiers.
What should have happened is that Belmondo, before relinquishing the steering
wheel, activates a control which allows a stunt man, out of camera-shot,
to take over driving the car. What actually happened is that Belmodo
caught his sleeve on the lever and the stunt man was unable to take control
of the car. As a result, the young Rachid ended up driving the car
solo, miraculously coping with a perilously narrow and bending stretch
of mountain road! For his part, Belmondo undertook all of his own
stunts except one - a parachute jump, which he left to an expert.
© James Travers 2001
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