En 1988, sur l'Île d'Ouvéa en Nouvelle-Calédonie, des troupes militaires françaises donnent l'assaut, après l'assassinat de quatre gendarmes, à la gendarmerie, puis la prise d'otages par des... Tout lireEn 1988, sur l'Île d'Ouvéa en Nouvelle-Calédonie, des troupes militaires françaises donnent l'assaut, après l'assassinat de quatre gendarmes, à la gendarmerie, puis la prise d'otages par des indépendantistes Kanak de vingt-sept gendarmes mobiles, entre les deux tours de l'électio... Tout lireEn 1988, sur l'Île d'Ouvéa en Nouvelle-Calédonie, des troupes militaires françaises donnent l'assaut, après l'assassinat de quatre gendarmes, à la gendarmerie, puis la prise d'otages par des indépendantistes Kanak de vingt-sept gendarmes mobiles, entre les deux tours de l'élection présidentielle.
- Policeman
- (as Leonid Uscher)
- Policeman
- (as Stas' Kmiec')
- Krojack's Colleague
- (as Sandor Tecsy)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWoody Allen decided to do his own television film version of his 1966 play, after a belated viewing of Don't Drink the Water (1969), with which he had nothing to do, and which he thought was inferior.
- Citations
Walter Hollander: $6,000 for three weeks of uninterrupted diarrhea!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Tvennesnack: En båtkonjuktör (2022)
- Bandes originalesHora ca la Caval (Shepherd's Dance)
Performed by Gheorghe Zamfir (as Georghe Zamfir) & Friends
Woody Allen's nebishy lines fall naturally from his own lips, but lacking the distance or the simply larger body Stanley Prager had to work with when directing Lou Jacobi as the naive Newark caterer who is accused of spying while innocently taking vacation pictures while on vacation in an unidentified Eastern European country on Broadway - or Howard Morris had when directing Jackie Gleason in the coarsened role in the 1969 film - Allen comes across less sympathetic and more blindly hysterical.
Nevertheless, Michael J. Fox (who had already been BACK TO THE FUTURE in his successful trilogy but was still a couple years from his last successful sitcom, SPIN CITY) as the disaster prone son of the ambassador who grants the family asylum balances the hysterical performance of the author nicely, as do TV favorites Julie Kavner (TRACEY ULLMAN and THE SIMPSONS) as Allen's wife and Mayim Bialik (BLOSSOM and THE BIG BANG THEORY) as his daughter and Fox's inevitable love interest.
Since the Cold War was essentially over by the time this picture was made, it remained a nostalgic picture of an earlier era told in farce form with comfortable narration from the late great announcer Ed Herlihy to remind us of the context (Americans believed innocent tourists were picked up on the slightest pretext to "trade" for captured Soviet spies after a few well publicized "spy trades").
Written at a time before the Middle East blew up, the visit of an unidentified emir and his harem (that the US wants to cater to for good relations - OIL hadn't seriously entered the picture yet) is played, along with an Orthodox priest who's been in asylum in an apartment on an upper floor of the embassy for six years and counting (an idea which horrifies the Allen character who can't bear the elevated menu at the embassy and can't understand why they can't send out for Chinese) as minor plot contrivances.
If this sort of old fashioned humor isn't your cup of tea, DON'T DRINK THE WATER may not go down too easily, but as an honest souvenir of Cold War humor and the transition period between Woody Allen's stand-up beginnings and his later serious films, it's well worth a look for any serious student of film or Allen. If you can take the stage farce pacing, it will even provide a fair share of honest laughs - more than the '69 film in any case.
"Isolated in the Embassy" situations have been grist for the comedy mills for years - although it's been a while since we've had a new one. Billy Wilder's 1961 ONE TWO THREE (based on a Ferenc Molnar play, "Egy, kettö, három") where a hard charging Jimmy Cagney tried to deal with the love and marriage of a runaway daughter of an Atlanta Coca Cola executive for a passionate East German worker while Berlin was still divided, or Art Buchwald's sadly unfilmed 1970 play SHEEP ON THE RUNWAY which satirized the havoc a right wing columnist like Joseph Alsop could cause in a front line embassy were probably better structured and hold up better than the early Allen play, but they all came from essentially the same well. All worth a look for nostalgia and more.
- eschetic-2
- 22 déc. 2010
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