The Sucker
The Sucker | |
---|---|
Film poster | |
Directed by | Gérard Oury |
Produced by | Robert Dorfmann |
Written by |
Gérard Oury Marcel Jullian |
Starring | Bourvil |
Music by | Georges Delerue |
Cinematography | Henri Decaë |
Release date |
|
Running time | 111 minutes |
Country | France |
Language |
French Italian |
Box office | 11,743,525 admissions (France) |
The Sucker (French: Le Corniaud, French pronunciation: [lə kɔʁˈnjo]) is a French, Italian and Spanish comedy film by Gérard Oury starring Louis de Funès and Bourvil. It was released in 1965. As of 2013, it is still one of the 20 highest-grossing films in France along with La Grande Vadrouille, another Oury-de Funès-Bourvil collaboration.[1]
The film was entered into the 4th Moscow International Film Festival where the actor Bourvil won a Special Diploma.[2]
Plot
Leaving Paris for his summer vacation, the naïve Antoine Maréchal has his 2CV totally wrecked in a collision with the Bentley of company director Léopold Saroyan. As compensation, Saroyan offers Maréchal the chance to drive a friend's 1964 white Cadillac DeVille convertible from Naples to Bordeaux, all expenses paid. Unknown to Maréchal, Saroyan is the leader of a criminal gang and the Cadillac is filled with heroin, gold and precious stones, including the largest diamond in the world, the Youkounkoun. Maréchal collects the car in Naples from where, unknown to him, Saroyan and his associates shadow him. Unknown to Saroyan, an Italian gang are aware of the Cadillac's contents and are shadowing it as well.
After an accident, in which the repairman finds and removes the gold, Maréchal reaches Rome, where a pretty manicurist called Gina joins him. She only does it to make her fiancé jealous and then finds a pretty German hitchhiker called Ursula to accompany him. At night the Italian gang steal the Cadillac but are chased by Saroyan's gang, who capture it after a gun battle in which all the heroin is destroyed and return it to Maréchal. Mickey, one of the Italian crooks, seduces Ursula, who invites him to join them. In an isolated spot, Mickey then tries to kill Maréchal, but Ursula sabotages the battery so that he cannot make off with the car and saves Maréchal's life. Left on his own, Maréchal gets a new battery and throws the ruined one, full of diamonds, into the sea.
Crossing the border into France at Menton, Maréchal sees Saroyan's car being stripped by the police. He realises that the car they want must be the one he is driving and that Saroyan must be crooked. Heading for Carcassonne, he rings an old friend who is now chief of police there. Still tracked by Saroyan and the Italians, he lures them all into the unmarked side door of the police staion, where they are arrested. Taking the Cadillac on the last leg to Bordeaux, he has another accident, in which he finds the Youkounkoun. There is a reward of 10 million francs for its return.
Cast
- Bourvil as Antoine Maréchal
- Louis de Funès as Léopold Saroyan
- Venantino Venantini as Mickey
- Henri Génès as Martial
- Beba Lončar as Ursula
- Saro Urzì as Tagliella
- Alida Chelli as Gina
- Lando Buzzanca as Lino
- Jack Ary as Customs Officer
- Pierre Roussel as Mario Costa
Reception
It was the most popular film at the French box office in 1965.[3]
References
- ↑ http://www.jpbox-office.com/top100.php?variable=France
- ↑ "4th Moscow International Film Festival (1965)". MIFF. Retrieved 2012-12-06.
- ↑ "1965 Box Office". Box Office Story.
External links
- Le Corniaud on IMDb