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La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

Posted By: Someonelse
La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

The Cow and I (1959)
DVD9 Custom | VIDEO_TS | PAL 16:9 | Cover | 01:52:28 | 5,21 Gb
Audio: French AC3 2.0 @ 192 kbps | Subs (added): English, Dutch
Genre: Comedy

The Cow and I is purportedly based on the wartime experiences of its star, French farceur Fernandel. The horse-faced comedian plays a French farmer stuck in Germany strong-armed into working for the Nazis. Deciding to escape, Fernandel and his faithful cow walk across Deutschland to his home in France. After a series of picaresque adventures, the farmer and his bovine buddy make it to French soil, only to run afoul of collaborators. The Cow and I was originally released as La Vache et le Prisonnier.

IMDB

La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

Fernandel is a French farmer forced to work in Germany during WW II. He decides to escape back to France, and, borrowing a cow (Marguerite), he sets out to walk across Germany. The strange pair have a number of odd adventures, and when Fernandel has to leave the cow at the bank of a river while he rows across, the cow finds a pontoon bridge and rejoins him. Finally Fernandel reaches France but is spotted by collaborationist police. He jumps on another train, which is headed back to Germany. One of Fernandel's lesser films, but still funny and charming.
La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

It is not hard to see why La Vache et le prisonnier is one of the most enduringly popular of Fernandel’s films. A moving fable about one man’s determined attempt to win his freedom against overwhelming odds, it is a film that has a universal appeal and has lost none of its charm since it was first seen in 1959. In a similar vein to Jean Renoir’s La Grande illusion (1937), the film both reminds us of the absurdity of war and shows how easy it is for beings from different nationalities (and even different species) to form an empathic link and help one another, without comprehending each other’s language. Whilst nations may fight, individuals are impelled, by their common humanity, to lend mutual support when they can. Sadly, only dumb animals have the good sense not to go to war with one another…

La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

This film was the first major success for director Henri Verneuil, who would, over the next two decades, deliver a series of box office hits, including Le Clan des Siciliens (1969) and Peur sur la ville (1975). La Vache et le prisonnier was in fact Verneuil’s most successful film; it drew an audience of 8.8 million in France, making it the biggest hit at the French box office in 1959. The film was based on the novel Une histoire vraie by Jacques Antoine, who also contributed to the screenplay. As well as being a successful author, Antoine is well-known for his contributions to French radio and television, for which he created and produced a number of popular shows, such as La Chasse aux trésors and Fort Boyard.

La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

La Vache et le prisonnier was Verneuil’s ninth and, by far, most popular collaboration with Fernandel; after an inconsequential short film entitled Escale au soleil (1947), they worked together on a string of feature comedies that included Le Boulanger de Valorgue (1953), L’Ennemi public no 1 (1953) and Le Mouton à cinq pattes (1954). Although Fernandel is better known as a comedic actor, towards the end of his career he did gravitate towards more serious roles. In La Vache et le prisonnier he gives what is generally considered one of his best dramatic performances, a genuine character portrayal that is engaging and subtly poignant. Fernandel’s scenes with Marguerite the cow are often funny (particularly the one in which the frisky cow goes off and finds herself a boyfriend) but they are also quite stirring; the sequence in which the cow and the prisoner are finally forced to part can hardly fail to bring a lump to the throat.

La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

In 1990, La Vache et le prisonnier became the first black-and-white French film to be subjected to the controversial (some might say heretical) colorisation process which had already been applied to several American films. This was ahead of a screening on the French television channel TF1 which attracted a massive audience. The coloured version of the film is not recommended as it manifestly lacks the atmosphere and lyricism of the original, mainly because Roger Hubert’s sumptuous black-and-white photography is disfigured by an ugly, very limited palette of earthy greens and browns. To appreciate the film in all its poetry and visual splendour, it has to be watched in its original monochrome format.

La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

In his final film before his death in 1971, Fernandel shared the limelight with another scene-stealing animal, a horse - in Henri Colpi’s Heureux qui comme Ulysse (1970). For those who are anxious to know what became of Marguerite after her happy hour in the spotlight, rest assured that she did not end up being led to the abattoir; Verneuil came to an arrangement with the cow’s owner that she should live out her days in comfort. As a rule, the French tend not to eat their film stars.
La vache et le prisonnier (1959)

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