L'emmerdeur
- 1973
- Tous publics
- 1h 20min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
3,9 k
MA NOTE
Ralf Milan, un tueur à gages, arrive à Montpellier pour tuer un témoin important. Il s'installe dans un hôtel sans savoir que son voisin est devenu névrosé après que sa femme l'a quitté.Ralf Milan, un tueur à gages, arrive à Montpellier pour tuer un témoin important. Il s'installe dans un hôtel sans savoir que son voisin est devenu névrosé après que sa femme l'a quitté.Ralf Milan, un tueur à gages, arrive à Montpellier pour tuer un témoin important. Il s'installe dans un hôtel sans savoir que son voisin est devenu névrosé après que sa femme l'a quitté.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Liza Braconnier
- Madame Randoni
- (non crédité)
Pierre Forget
- Félix
- (non crédité)
Robert Galligani
- L'employé de réception
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
One of the many great comedies from France from the 1970's, and a commodity which is seriously lacking nowadays in that country ! It is now available in France ( March 2007 ) on DVD, and please note that the DVD has English Subtitles if required. Ventura was a great actor and Brel, though hopeless as an actor, occupied a part which didn't need a great actor. Brel in this film can get on your nerves at time, just like Michael Crawford in "Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em" but despite this, the spectator has a good time ! The catchy, almost wailing, theme music by François Rauber (played on a whiny accordeon) is typical of many French films from the sixties and seventies and serves as a way of identifying the origin of the film. Given that now both the main protagonists of the film are dead, the sound of this accordéon is particularly nostalgic. The recipe of two character-opposed central characters is often a central tenet of French cinema ( Richard / Depardieu, Depardieu/Reno, De Funes/Carmet, De Funes/Bourvil ...... and Ventura/Brel in this film )and has been used with success to make generations of moviegoers laugh ! Francis Veber had a large had in this film although its director was Edouard Molinaro - is it any surprise then that one of the characters has the name François Pignon. Indeed, BREL is the ORIGINAL François Pignon. The character was subsequently interpreted by Pierre Richard, Jacques Villeret, Daniel Auteuil et alia ............
I liked this film, not really belly laugh funny, but the situation comedy that Lino Ventura and Jacques Brel get themselves into, can be very humorous. Ventura plays an assassin who is trying to do a job, however he gets caught up with Brel's annoying and suicidal hypochondriac, foiling his attempts, by trying to commit suicide in the room next door to the room Ventura is in to do the hit. This causes the police to be called to the hotel. When they arrive however, Ventura persuades them that Brel is a friend and he will look after him and get him back on his feet. He decides to get rid of Brel, so that he can continue on his original task, but then ends up helping him to settle the score with his wife, who has left Brel for a rich medical doctor and that is when the real fun starts...!
One of my favourite films. A very funny story made even more so by a brilliantly underplayed performance by Lino Ventura, portraying an hitman sidelined by a very annoying travelling salesperson played not as badly as some critics have suggested by popular songster Jacques Brel. This movie is so laugh-filled one wonders where more recent comedies so have failed. A must-see for film fans.
What a gem is 'L'emmerdeur' (distributed in the Anglophone market as 'A Pain in the Ass'), the 85-minute film made in 1973 by Édouard Molinaro. It is a 'noir' comedy that catches Lino Ventura at the peak of his popularity built mostly on 'tough guy' roles - either gangsters or policemen - and gives the popular singer Jacques Brel the opportunity of his last big screen role (the tenth in only six years of activity as an actor). Both actors discover and use their comic resources to the maximum, in a genre different than the ones audiences know them in, bringing to screen a script full of verve and action written by Francis Veber (based on his own theater play), who would try with much less success a 'remake', 35 years later, in his last film as a director.
The story, which takes place in Montpellier, combines marital melodrama with film noir with paid assassins as heroes. Milan is sent to eliminate a witness who is going to reveal the truth about a gangster network at a trial. He rents a room at a hotel overlooking the entrance of the courthouse where the future victim will get out of the car at 2:00 p.m. His bad luck is that in the adjoing room has just checked-in François Pignon, a traveling salesman who tries in vain to arrange a meeting with his wife who left him for her psychiatrist. The desperate Pignon's suicide attempt may disrupt the assassin's plans, attracting the attention of the police, who are already on alert. Milan must try to convince Pignon not to kill himself and at the same time fulfill his mission. It won't be easy.
The impossible combination of Ventura - Brel works perfectly, to the delight of the spectators. It can be said that Ventura is playing a gangster role as he has played in many other films, but this time he is put in situations where he is very very unlucky. Brel borrows mime and comic gags from beloved comedy actors of the period. Veber's screenplay is written in such a way that the events happen almost in real time. It is one of the post-Nouvelle Vague influences, the other being the free use of the mobile camera, which takes us into hotel rooms, high up on railings and cornices outside the hotel, or in super-fast car chases, as the hero must be at the scene of the future crime at 2:00 p.m., as I said. Cinematographer Raoul Coutard had already worked with Truffaut, Godard and Costa-Gavras. The result of their collaboration is a film that uses in a professional manner the techniques of the cinematographic avant-garde to create a quality 'crowd-pleaser' that passes well the test of half a century that has elapsed since its release.
The story, which takes place in Montpellier, combines marital melodrama with film noir with paid assassins as heroes. Milan is sent to eliminate a witness who is going to reveal the truth about a gangster network at a trial. He rents a room at a hotel overlooking the entrance of the courthouse where the future victim will get out of the car at 2:00 p.m. His bad luck is that in the adjoing room has just checked-in François Pignon, a traveling salesman who tries in vain to arrange a meeting with his wife who left him for her psychiatrist. The desperate Pignon's suicide attempt may disrupt the assassin's plans, attracting the attention of the police, who are already on alert. Milan must try to convince Pignon not to kill himself and at the same time fulfill his mission. It won't be easy.
The impossible combination of Ventura - Brel works perfectly, to the delight of the spectators. It can be said that Ventura is playing a gangster role as he has played in many other films, but this time he is put in situations where he is very very unlucky. Brel borrows mime and comic gags from beloved comedy actors of the period. Veber's screenplay is written in such a way that the events happen almost in real time. It is one of the post-Nouvelle Vague influences, the other being the free use of the mobile camera, which takes us into hotel rooms, high up on railings and cornices outside the hotel, or in super-fast car chases, as the hero must be at the scene of the future crime at 2:00 p.m., as I said. Cinematographer Raoul Coutard had already worked with Truffaut, Godard and Costa-Gavras. The result of their collaboration is a film that uses in a professional manner the techniques of the cinematographic avant-garde to create a quality 'crowd-pleaser' that passes well the test of half a century that has elapsed since its release.
Watching movies 'backwards' is an interesting experience. There are so many good titles out there that were shot before I was born or I was grown up enough to have a chance to see them. Buddy, Buddy is one of them. However, looking at the critiques, I discovered that this is again a remake of a great French movie, L'Emmerdeur. Last time I have seen Ture Lies first, than I watched La Totale!, which was quite a disappointment, as the US version was just way much better, more money, better actors, etc. So now, I have decided to watch L'Emmerdeur first and just then Buddy, Buddy.
Although the movie was not fast as a paced action movie, the 80 minutes went by quite fast. I liked the atmosphere of the film, which is typical for French movies of this time: simple setup, small budget, great ideas and great actors. I just loved the funny situations and little jokes throughout.
The other attraction of the movie is the great Belgian singer, Jacques Brel (1929-1978). Although not French, he's a characteristic of French pop music of the 20th. Although he played in a number of movies, he's really not talented for an actor, the only other movie of his that worth a watch is 'L'aventure, c'est l'aventure'. However, as a composer/singer, he was fantastic, just browse to jacquesbrel.be to discover.
In case you're a fan of French movies as I am, this is a must to watch. However, as time has passed, L'Emmerdeur brings enough entertainment only for a Saturday/Sunday afternoon for the big audience, strongly recommended for family watch - 7/10.
Although the movie was not fast as a paced action movie, the 80 minutes went by quite fast. I liked the atmosphere of the film, which is typical for French movies of this time: simple setup, small budget, great ideas and great actors. I just loved the funny situations and little jokes throughout.
The other attraction of the movie is the great Belgian singer, Jacques Brel (1929-1978). Although not French, he's a characteristic of French pop music of the 20th. Although he played in a number of movies, he's really not talented for an actor, the only other movie of his that worth a watch is 'L'aventure, c'est l'aventure'. However, as a composer/singer, he was fantastic, just browse to jacquesbrel.be to discover.
In case you're a fan of French movies as I am, this is a must to watch. However, as time has passed, L'Emmerdeur brings enough entertainment only for a Saturday/Sunday afternoon for the big audience, strongly recommended for family watch - 7/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe Director, Edouard Molinaro plays the barman of the coffee shop. And there's a moment that he's got a vinyl disc of Jacques Brel in his hands.
- GaffesA door is blocked with a chair under the handle. Unfortunately no one of the movie crew noticed or seems to have bothered that the door opens the other way.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Francis Veber artisan du rire: La saga Pignon (2001)
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- How long is A Pain in the Ass?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- A Pain in the Ass
- Lieux de tournage
- Montpellier, Hérault, France(on location)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 20min(80 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1
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