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  • A nice comedy, that aged pretty well compared to other 'classics' of that period. Bourvil and Fernandel are doing a good job in their only (i think) collaboration and show good complicity.

    Years before "Bienvenue chez les Ch'tis", we have this opposition between North and South (summarized in their cooking style but not limited to that) - but in the South and in a really different settings as this is not the core of the movie. Core of the comedy is the come-back of Fernandel to its home place, but many many years after the war has ended. What will he find and how will he react to it? The best is not to spoil it but let you watch it!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is probably one of the most underrated comedies coming out of the whole of French cinema. It contains two of its' "monstres sacrés" ( pillars ), Fernandel and Bourvil, indeed it was the first time the two played together. Shot for the most part in the town of Martigues, close to Marseille in the Bouches-du-Rhône department near to the Mediterranean coast. Martigues is very picturesque and is known locally as the "Venise Provençale" ( provençal Venice ) because of its criss-cross network of canals. All this makes for very picturesque and provençal surroundings plus the local accents which all add flavour to this film.

    The premise of the film is that Fernand who had once run a provençal restaurant in this town and left to go to fight in the war in the north, never returned and was presumed dead. In fact he did not die but married again an austrian girl from the Tyrol ( Gerda ) and remained with her, that is until the day her husband returned from Siberia, which means Fernand had to take off back to Southern France. But, this episode having lasted fourteen years, Fernand's first wife has since remarried Bourvil, also in the restaurant trade, but into Normandy cooking - you need to know that Normands cook everything in butter whereas the people from the south of France use olive oil to cook with and tremble at the thought of using butter.

    There is therefore a sort of comparison of the two different types of cooking and Fernand returns to Martigues to find his wife remarried, however he is accepted into the household through the kindness of Bourvil but the restaurant has now become more high-class than before and Fernand's old friends are not welcome in the place. All this makes for light-hearted comedical conflicting situations. Also, administratively, Fernand is considered dead, his name appears on the war memorial. He must signal he is alive to then be able to divorce his first wife, that she may legally remarry her second husband, who up to now is considered a "mari putatif" !! This means that he is nothing more than a "presumed" husband as compared with a real one. The poor guy who thought he had happily been married for several years now has doubt thrown on the validity of his marriage and this puts him in a more-than-foul mood which even goes as far as his returning to his native Normandy.

    Happily a solution is found to all this, which I shall not reveal here. Suffice it to say that the acting is absolutely GREAT ! Any fan of Bourvil and/or FERNANDEL should not miss this film on any account - it is available on DVD in France but regrettably again with no subtitles of any kind for non-French speakers. I have no idea at all whether it is known outside this country but it would certainly appear to be underrated as regards the magnificent interplay between the two main actors.

    I have seen this film in a colour version but the DVD has a black and white one, so must assume that it has been colorized at one stage of its life.

    The theme music is also a catchy tune which remains in your head long after the film has finished. And the director is .... oh, that man again, Gilles Grangier. I certainly seem to end up being attracted to everyone of this gentleman's films ! How strange !
  • When he was young, Bourvil admired Fernandel, and it was a pleasure shooting with him, but Fernandel was tough with Bourvil trying to steal the movie and Grangier helped Bourvil without showing it to Fernandel. Bourvil had already met the fabulous Jean Gabin in "la Traversée de Paris", Jean Marais in "le Capitan", and he was soon to team with Louis de Funès in "le Corniaud" and "la Grande Vadrouille". Bourvil and Fernandel are great in this confrontation of the two husbands with two different cookings in picturesque Martigues, and finally having big laughs together, these scenes are great. I'm not a fan of Fernandel, but here he is much tougher than usual and he gains a lot on the screen. Louis de Funès was soon shooting his own restaurant movie, "le Grand restaurant".