Gaul, gall
Le cinéma à la française
by Gerald Peary
THE DINNER GAME. Written and directed by Francis Veber. With Jacques Villeret and Thierry
Lhermitte. At the Avon.
There's the France that makes me envious, the mad mad nation of
advanced cinephilia, where crowds line up for Iranian movies where every
regular person you meet seems to know intimately the American oeuvre of John
Ford and Nicholas Ray and (yes) Jerry Lewis and being a total film freak is
unapologetically normal. There's also, simultaneously, the bourgeois, coiffured
France of hack, middle-of-the-road taste, the La cage aux folles
people, whose choice for a rare cinema night out is "something very French."
Translation: a sub-Neil Simon domestic farce of the Le Sex Shop variety:
banal, cliché'd, drearily conventional.
The Dinner Game was written and directed by Francis Veber, the author
of La cage aux folles, and it's the latest, most successful ever example
of France's so-called "boulevard comedy" genre. This amazing-grossing movie
actually rivaled Titanic for French box office in 1998, and it could
succeed with the more mainstream among the subtitled crowd in the USA. But to
this turned-off American, The Dinner Game is so bland and enervating
that even a Hugh Grant should stay away.
Veber's story: a bunch of rich Parisians indulge in base, frat-guy humor by
inviting real-life "idiots" to a private supper and then laughing at their
unsuspecting, boorish guests. Par example, a visitor obsessed with
Australian boomerangs spends the whole evening soliloquizing about aboriginal
weaponry while his hosts, feigning deep interest, chortle behind his back.
Among the patronizing crew is handsome publisher Pierre Brochant (Thierry
Lhermitte, the oft-cast Cary Grant of "boulevard" comedy), who looks high and
low for a fabulous "idiot" with which to impress his pals. The search ends with
François Pignon (Jacques Villeret), whose specialty is building
miniature bridges and Eiffel Towers out of matchsticks and glue. Won't Pignon
be willing to come to dinner and talk about his amateur art?
The Dinner Game began as a Parisian stage play, which then playwright
Veber situated in the publisher's svelte apartment. Seemingly to ensure that
his comedy could be confined to one set, Veber contrived to have Brochant throw
out his back. Forced to stay home, the publisher never gets to the "idiots"
party; instead, Pignon comes to him and causes havoc. Ha! Ha! Ha! Imagine the
bull-in-a-china-shop comic possibilities when a blundering "idiot" rubs against
a guy with a bad back. There's a lot of that in the movie, and it's fleshed out
with by-the-numbers farce: Pignon mixing up Brochant's estranged wife and ditsy
mistress; Pignon accidentally inviting in a tax collector who looks
suspiciously at Brochant's unreported worldly wealth.
Molière this isn't, or Rules of the Game. Blue-eyed Thierry
Lhermitte is a lightweight leading-man fixture in France, but he doesn't
especially translate. Jacques Villeret is far more a mystery to me as the
"idiot," funny-looking (think a balding, porcine butcher wrapping up some
innards) in lieu of funny. He makes faces and says dumb things on the
telephone. Pardonnez-moi, I forgot to laugh. I did groan, however, when
the narrative wound down, sentimental sit-com style, with the heart-rending
revelation that the "idiot" isn't really an "idiot," that goofy appearances are
deceptive. Pignon's some kind of genius, this Forrest Gump of France.