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L'Homme orchestre

Titre original : L'homme orchestre
  • 1970
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
6,2/10
3,7 k
MA NOTE
Louis de Funès in L'Homme orchestre (1970)
ComedyMusical

Le directeur d'une troupe de ballet et son neveu partent en tournée en Italie et interdisent aux danseuses de fréquenter des hommes. Les ennuis commencent lorsqu'on découvre qu'une des fille... Tout lireLe directeur d'une troupe de ballet et son neveu partent en tournée en Italie et interdisent aux danseuses de fréquenter des hommes. Les ennuis commencent lorsqu'on découvre qu'une des filles a un bébé à Rome.Le directeur d'une troupe de ballet et son neveu partent en tournée en Italie et interdisent aux danseuses de fréquenter des hommes. Les ennuis commencent lorsqu'on découvre qu'une des filles a un bébé à Rome.

  • Réalisation
    • Serge Korber
  • Scénario
    • Jean Halain
    • Serge Korber
    • Géza von Radványi
  • Casting principal
    • Louis de Funès
    • Noëlle Adam
    • Olivier De Funès
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,2/10
    3,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Serge Korber
    • Scénario
      • Jean Halain
      • Serge Korber
      • Géza von Radványi
    • Casting principal
      • Louis de Funès
      • Noëlle Adam
      • Olivier De Funès
    • 13avis d'utilisateurs
    • 7avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Rôles principaux34

    Modifier
    Louis de Funès
    Louis de Funès
    • Monsieur Édouard - dit Evan Evans
    • (as Louis de Funes)
    Noëlle Adam
    Noëlle Adam
    • Françoise
    Olivier De Funès
    Olivier De Funès
    • Philippe Evans
    • (as Olivier de Funes)
    Daniel Bellus
    • Le jeune automobiliste au feu rouge
    Max Desrau
    • Un automobiliste au feu rouge
    Tiberio Murgia
    Tiberio Murgia
    • Le père sicilien
    Vittoria Di Silverio
    Martine Kelly
    Martine Kelly
    • La danseuse qui se marie…
    Paola Tedesco
    Paola Tedesco
    • La fille sicilienne
    Franco Volpi
    • Le marquis
    Michèle Alba
    • Une danseuse
    Lydie Callier
    • Une danseuse
    Géraldine Lynton
    • Une danseuse
    Francoise Occipinti
    • Une danseuse
    • (as Françoise Occhipinti)
    Christine Reynolds
    • Une danseuse
    Annie Trembasiewicz
    • Une danseuse
    Leila Bouvier
    • Une danseuse
    Françoise Gres
    • Une danseuse
    • Réalisation
      • Serge Korber
    • Scénario
      • Jean Halain
      • Serge Korber
      • Géza von Radványi
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs13

    6,23.7K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    Oblomov-2

    Excellent French Comedy

    I saw this film in India in the mid-70s an a dubbed English version called "One Man Band". Louis des Funes was already popular thanks to his "Fantomas" movies and this one is a very inventive comedy. Worth watching and to keep when available. I have been looking for a video of this film for years.
    10Slovakgal

    Another Great Comedy from Louis De Funes

    i saw this movie about a hundred times, under the title Piti Piti Pa as used in Czech or Slovak Republic.

    This movie is great for people who have a good sense of humour. Louis De Funes stars in this movie with his son Olivier De Funes who is also a great actor.

    This movie is about a group of girl dancers led by a man who doesn't support the girls having men around or getting into any relationship. But on a tour, one of the girls finds out she has a son and out of desperation and fear of the boss telling her off, she uses him and his nephew to get out of it...
    Kirpianuscus

    same de Funes

    in essence, nice slice from "70's. atmosphere, songs, dance, relationship. at the first few, a film of Louis de Funes, not real different by many others. but this is its great virtue - a story like pretext, the little tyrannic boss and the young women with plots, secrets, charm, Olivier de Funes in middle of feelings, surprises , using teenager humor, clichés - the Sicilian family - confusion and the clear sky. all the tricks of French cinema. and the same force of seduction. because it is nice, amusing, almost lovely. and because the admiration for the work of de Funes remains at high level. this detail is the most important. and the feeling after the end of film. like delicate flavor of a lost innocent age. so, a good option for relax.
    9megArnold

    The most unusual and the best of Louis de Funès...

    Those were the seventies, alright. (especially for those like me who only remember them vaguely) Saturated primary colors everywhere, telephones shaped like pyramids or like molten wax, easy chairs that were all but easy to sit on, catchy music, silly lyrics. This movie is as stylized as it can be (short of a Greenaway movie) and provides silly, but stylish entertainment.

    Louis de Funès, at 56, shows that he is not only still the explosive comedian we all love, but that he is able to sing (in his way) and that he can even play a convincing chef-de-ballet, able to hold a candle to his female co-stars when it comes to dancing...

    And, as another reviewer pointed out, we come to see his softer side as well, in his relationship with his nephew (actually real-life son), "his" girls, "his" babies.

    The film benefits much from an excellent all-female dance chorus, and the dance numbers are catchy, and top-notch in their 1970 silliness.

    A very uncommon movie if you expect standard LdF fare. Plot is, of course, nonexistent as any de Funès movie, but here we have abundant song and dance numbers, a Babylonian confusion of at least five languages (shadows of Tati's "Play Time", perhaps?), a dancing (!) Louis de Funès, and, as I said, plenty of 1970 design (atrocities, if you want) in brilliant colors, including the girls' costumes, which magically change between scenes.

    9/10 all in all. Too many plot holes for a perfect 10, and sadly Olivier de Funès's acting talents, despite his good looks, cannot hold their ground for a lead role against his father. (He wisely chose to pursue a different career after one more movie) Yet, the movie is highly entertaining, stylish and Louis de Funès's acting makes this one his finest.
    8ElMaruecan82

    One of Louis de Funès' best...

    There's not much of a plot in Serge Korber "L'Homme Orchestre" (or translated literally "The Orchestra Man") but that takes nothing away from the emotional sweep it provides from one scene to another. Yes, the film is all 70's kitsch but it is oh so full of such jovial and retro-psychedelic exuberance that you just want to embrace its silliness and share a few steps with the dancers. The whole films is like a fantasy but a fantasy that takes one element seriously: music, and music is conducted by a real man-orchestra, a complete artist named Louis De Funès.

    The comical legend was born in a Spanish family and was a jazz pianist during the war, spending days and nights playing in bars and cabarets before getting his first break in show business and becoming an entertainer. So musical rhythm have been running in his blood for the most part of his life, in fact, one of his earliest successes was the musical-hall themed movie, "Ah les belles bacchantes". Sixteen years later, in 1970, a role like Evan Evans, manager of a dancing company in the South of France might have sounded like a departure from his usual portrayals of bourgeois prominent figures or policemen, but it's in fact a real come-back to his roots that 'Fufu' accomplishes here: stage, music and all.

    And Funes' experience, more than his comical talent (which is saying a lot) is perhaps the best blessing the film could ever have because his performance is believable, there's a way he uses his body language to match a musical tempo, sometimes he literally grabs the notes with his hand and seem to drive the dancers and musicians to his 'vision', even the way he uses sort of telepathy is the kind of mental gimmick you'd believe a man passionate about his job would use. Much more once the 56-year old man sets his foot on the stage, you don't believe he hasn't been a dancer, De Funès has the moves and it shows in the film. I couldn't think of another actor who could have pulled it better, perhaps Yves Montand, but imagine him directing a group of young women, his charm would operate as smoothly as surely as it would destroy the film's premise.

    Because De Funès is still De Funès after all, a protective fatherly figure, a man who means business and insists that his company is more disciplined than a convent. His relationship with the girls sets him up as a man of impeccable morality, and that's what backfires at him when a the silly plot about the babies starts. But what I love in his Evan Evans is that he doesn't play his usual self-centered side, except for business reasons, his dedication to his art and to the girls establishes one of his most lovable figure, and even allows his usual shtick to look fresh and original because this time he doesn't preach the same choir.

    You see him teaching them self-defense, serving dinner but not after checking their weight, and in one of the film's most memorable scene telling them the story about the wolf and the lamb, and that scene alone is a showcase of his comedic gifts. These moments are full of irresistible tenderness and even the girls are believable in that role, because they don't act as if they were with Evans but with De Funès, so even with so many small roles, there's never a performance that doesn't ring true. They even manage to outsmart him a few times. And you can tell he knows his girls, their habits, their manners, their languages etc. Not to mention that the film captures a sort of lost coquettish innocence exulting from these little dances, one I'd take over all the bare-ass humping we handle today.

    De Funès' movies have always been divided in two, those that aged well, those that didn't and in the late 60's many movies seemed to simply exploit his popularity and give him rather meager scripts where you could throw a few tantrums and mimics and attract one million or two; De Funès wasn't fooled by that and admitted he did a few stinkers, and it's easy to spot them, there's a reliable test to determine if it's a good or bad De Funès, when he relies too much on crazy mimics and grimaces, it means that the film is desperately begging you to laugh, when the film is good enough, De Funès doesn't overplay it.

    Another reason the film works is that it cleverly exploits the presence of his son Olivier and doesn't just play him as an obedient and handsome sidekick or foil to his father (uncle in the film). Philippe starts as a naive young man and a pawn of one of his uncle's most cunning scheme (you'd see how far he'd get to keep one of his girls) but there's an evolution all through the film, and his good looks and moderate singing talent contributes to very memorable musical moments, the most defining being the little duet with De Funès while they're pampering two babies. The little tone of this sequence, the intimacy between the two men, redeem all the contrivances of the plot, you know this is a film that trusts its material enough it knows it can get away with a little silliness.

    François de Roubaix's music is catchy and memorable, the outdoors shot in Italy gives it's a nice international flavor and I wonder if some montage sequences weren't ahead of its time, but the bottom-line is that it is one of my favorite De Funès' movie and it's not just nostalgia, many movies I enjoyed as a kid didn't improve that well over the course of the year.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Italian censorship visa # 56888 delivered on 24 September 1970.
    • Citations

      Monsieur Édouard - dit Evan Evans: You're getting married?

    • Connexions
      Featured in Louis de Funes intime (2007)
    • Bandes originales
      Ballet du Rêve
      Music by François de Roubaix

      Lyrics by Jean Halain

      Performed by Olivier De Funès

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The One Man Band?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 septembre 1970 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
      • Italie
    • Site officiel
      • French Films site_photos
    • Langues
      • Français
      • Anglais
      • Espagnol
      • Italien
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Band
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France
    • Sociétés de production
      • Gaumont Distribution
      • Gaumont International
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 25 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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