La grande lessive (!) (1968) Poster

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6/10
1968... Time for the big wash!
GrandeMarguerite23 April 2009
Bourvil was known (and loved!) for his talents as a comic actor, playing often roles of gentle and naive characters. But he was much more than that as he was also capable of more dramatic or serious roles (check for instance "L"arbre de Noël", "Les misérables", "Fortunat" and of course "Le cercle rouge"). And what he did with director Jean-Pierre Mocky in "Un drôle de paroissien", "La grande lessive" and "L'étalon" was simply, hem, different.

Starting out as an actor, Jean-Pierre Mocky soon began to direct his own movies. By 1962, he had defined his style: personal, provocative, sometimes desultory, sometimes going too far past the limits of bad taste. Among his best films stands "La grande lessive", released in 1968 (not a coincidence) when France was shaken up by various social movements.

This comedy is about Armand Saint-Just (Bourvil), a high school teacher who plans a vendetta against television. An eccentric inventor has produced an aerosol spray that when applied effectively renders television antennae useless. With the help of a sport teacher who scales heights to apply the spray to the receivers, Saint-Just's goal is to keep his pupils from being polluted by a senseless medium (in his eyes). Soon the TV network executives launch an all-out search for the perpetrators as television revenues plummet. The police is soon called in to solve the mystery as Saint-Just and his crew slowly move towards their ultimate goal (the Eiffel tower, where the biggest antenna is)...

All right, this caricature against the power of television has aged a little bit. And yes, Mocky has almost always botched his work. However, movies like this one contain enjoyable moments as most of the actors deliver really funny performances. Bourvil was amazing in Mocky's movies, but here it is definitively Francis Blanche who has the craziest part of them all (if you think that Francis Blanche in drag may just look like a nightmare... you're just quite right!). Having said that, this movie lacks typically of a real script with a well-written ending. Nevertheless, its corrosive content still leaves a rather strong impression. Too bad that the cinematography has not the same strength!
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7/10
A jubilant film that does not engender melancholy, with a slashed dramaturgy
Curious subject at the beginning of the television (we are in 1968): a French teacher sabotages the television antennas of his students, because they are stupefied by them and sleep in class. So we are at the beginning of television. But it is a subject that could be transposed with reality TV or social networks.

It is obviously treated with the style of Jean-Pierre Mocky. With a great cast: Bourvil as a French teacher possessed by his mission, Francis Blanche as a sex-obsessed dentist, Michael Lonsdale as General De Gaulle's butler (in a series of jubilant scenes around alcohol in his apartment with his wife), Roland Dubillard as Bourvil's handyman sports teacher.

Let's add the policemen, stupid as often with Jean-Pierre Mocky. And let's not forget Jean Poiret always perfect as a fake ass and a high-flying liar.

The highlight of the film is Bourvil in a character far from his usual distributions where he is the clown of service. Here he is on a quest to ensure that his students learn and are not dumbed down by television.

A jubilant film that does not engender melancholy, with a slashed dramaturgy, made in Mocky.
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8/10
A cautionary satire that has only grown in relevance
myriamlenys27 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Now that the fair nation of France is avidly watching television, millions of children stay up past their bedtime. In Paris a few devoted teachers have grown tired of the sight of sleeping pupils. Armed with canisters full of a special compound, they traipse over the rooftops à la Santa Claus in order to sabotage TV antennas. It's a perilous enterprise but then, what hero would shy away from a just fight ?

A highly topical comedy, "La grande lessive" denounced the way television stole both the heart and the energy of the young. The movie was made in 1968 and nowadays the problem has become even more toxic, due to the appearance of gadgets like laptops and smartphones. Indeed, many professional teachers will pine for the days when they just had to compete with television.

"La grande lessive" is quite amusing, with an engaging story, interesting characters and funny jokes. (Mind you, I'm not sure that the character of the sex-obsessed dentist has aged all that well.) The satire has a genuine bite, depicting a whole nation clinging to its television set like an addict to his fix. And just like addicts, the television viewers respond very badly to the prospect of going without. For instance, when the screens turn blank all over an apartment block, a panicked mob drags a repairman out of his shop, whether he wants the job or not.

Comedy highlight : the seasoned streetwalker moving on to a higher level.
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