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Bizarre, Bizarre

Original title: Drôle de drame
  • 1937
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Jean-Louis Barrault, Louis Jouvet, Françoise Rosay, and Michel Simon in Bizarre, Bizarre (1937)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer0:52
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45 Photos
Comedy

In Victorian London, a crime novelist and his wife fake their disappearance in order to hide from an uptight Anglican bishop who is leading a campaign against the "evils" of crime fiction.In Victorian London, a crime novelist and his wife fake their disappearance in order to hide from an uptight Anglican bishop who is leading a campaign against the "evils" of crime fiction.In Victorian London, a crime novelist and his wife fake their disappearance in order to hide from an uptight Anglican bishop who is leading a campaign against the "evils" of crime fiction.

  • Director
    • Marcel Carné
  • Writers
    • J. Storer Clouston
    • Jacques Prévert
    • Marcel Carné
  • Stars
    • Françoise Rosay
    • Michel Simon
    • Jean-Pierre Aumont
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marcel Carné
    • Writers
      • J. Storer Clouston
      • Jacques Prévert
      • Marcel Carné
    • Stars
      • Françoise Rosay
      • Michel Simon
      • Jean-Pierre Aumont
    • 17User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 0:52
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos45

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Françoise Rosay
    Françoise Rosay
    • Margaret Molyneux
    Michel Simon
    Michel Simon
    • Irwin Molyneux
    Jean-Pierre Aumont
    Jean-Pierre Aumont
    • Billy
    Louis Jouvet
    Louis Jouvet
    • Archibald Soper
    Nadine Vogel
    • Eva
    Henri Guisol
    Henri Guisol
    • Buffington
    Jenny Burnay
    Jenny Burnay
    • Madame Pencil
    Agnès Capri
    • La chanteuse des rues
    Annie Cariel
    • Elisabeth Soper - la femme de l'évêque
    Jane Loury
    • Mrs. McPhearson
    • (as Jeanne Lory)
    Madeleine Suffel
    • Victory
    Sinoël
    • Le gardien de prison
    René Génin
    René Génin
    • Le balayeur
    • (as Génin)
    Max Morise
    • James, le domestique des Molyneux
    Marcel Duhamel
    • Le fêtard amoureux des enterrements
    Ky Duyen
    • L'hôtelier chinois de Soho
    Pierre Alcover
    Pierre Alcover
    • L'inspecteur-chef Bray
    • (as Alcover)
    Jean-Louis Barrault
    Jean-Louis Barrault
    • William Kramps dit Le tueur de bouchers
    • Director
      • Marcel Carné
    • Writers
      • J. Storer Clouston
      • Jacques Prévert
      • Marcel Carné
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.42K
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    Featured reviews

    10JohnHowardReid

    Delightfully Bizarre, Anti-British Foolery

    Spoofs are generally not popular with the masses (except when Crosby/Hope or Abbott/Costello or Woody Allen are doing the spoofing) so it's no surprise to discover there exist few box-office viable spoofs of film noir. (I know people will claim Alexander Mackendrick's 1955 The Ladykillers, but this is actually a marvelous spoof of crime caper movies. Otto Heller's photographic style not only shines brightly into every nook and cranny, but the story always goes for the belly laugh rather than the jugular vein). A notable exception is the Marcel Carné 1937 Drole de Drame, in which one of the finest casts ever assembled – Jouvet, Simon, Rosay, Barrault, Aumont, and the lovely Nadine Vogel (who made only four movies, of which this is her debut) wrestle with a delightfully ridiculous plot that manages to get wilder and wilder as it progresses from pugnacious snobbery through blatant hypocrisy to the most ridiculous cop shop misinvestigation ever presented on a big-budget theatre screen. Schuftann's atmospheric, noir photography and Trauner's nightmarishly sprawling sets rival any similar creations from Berlin or Hollywood. The movie is chock full of bizarre touches, but the one that tickled me best was the sleeping journo, most amusingly played by Henri Guisol (who enjoyed quite a career in French who-dun-its and noir).
    9planktonrules

    despite some plot holes, a fabulously screwy movie

    Boy do I love French movies from the mid-late 1930s. They were typified by wonderful cinematography, excellent sets and magical stories. Artistically, many of them are at least as good as anything Hollywood had to offer.

    A fantastic example of my appreciation of this older style is this movie, Drôle de Drame. Like such great 30s French films as The Baker's Wife, the film abounds with WONDERFUL and very colorful supporting characters. Are they altogether realistic, NOT IN THE LEAST--but they are wonderful, nevertheless. They remind me a lot of the odd characters you might find in films by Frank Capra or Preston Sturgis. The silliness of the film also reminds me of films like Arsenic and Old Lace or Bringing Up Baby--and this a a STRONG complement indeed! In addition, this film is a delight on the eyes--with BETTER than Hollywood camera and set design--it just looks marvelous! So, despite all these positives why does it only get a 9?! Well, the plot is really cute but full of holes. In other words, the fundamental plot element leading to all the hilarity just isn't logical. BUT, WHO CARES?! It's so cute, well-made and the ride is so much fun, I really didn't care and I strongly recommend this film to anyone.

    I would try to discuss the plot, but considering how weird and convoluted it is, I think it best not to even try.

    FYI--for parents, there is a brief nude scene involving a charming serial killer swimming naked in a goldfish pond (!). You get to see this guy's tush--so, if you do NOT want the kiddies seeing this, either speed the DVD up when Mrs. Molyneux enters the greenhouse or try another film. It is VERY brief, though.
    8claudio_carvalho

    A Hilarious Comedy of Farce and Mistakes

    In the Victorian London, the botanist Irwin Molyneux (Michel Simon) and his wife Margaret Molyneux (Françoise Rosay) are bankrupted but still keeping the appearance due to the successful crime novels written by Irwin under the pseudonym of Felix Chapel. Their cook has just left the family, when Irwin's snoopy and hypocrite cousin Archibald Soper (Louis Jouvet) that is in campaign against the police stories of Felix Chapel invites himself to have dinner in Irwin's house. Margaret decides to keep the farce of their social position secretly cooking the dinner, while the clumsy Irwin justifies her absence telling the bishop Soper that she had just traveled to the country to meet some friends. However Soper suspects of Irwin and calls the Scotland Yard, assuming that his cousin had poisoned his wife. Irwin and Margaret decide to hide the truth to avoid an exposition of their financial situation, moving to a low-budget hotel in the Chinese neighborhood, getting into trouble.

    "Drôle de Drame ou L'Étrange Aventure de Docteur Molyneux" is a hilarious theatrical comedy of farce and mistakes. Most of the characters are hypocrite, greedy, lazy or simply incompetent and the situations they get involved are silly, naive but very funny. In spite of having irrelevant flaws in the plot, this film is a great entertainment. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "Família Exótica" ("Exotic Family")
    9pppatty

    get a new summary

    I haven't read the other user comments but whoever did the summary for this film possibly hasn't seen it! It has absolutely nothing to do with a serial killer of women (the killer in question kills butchers because they kill animals) and Soper accuses his cousin Molyneux of having poisoned his (Molyneux's) wife. The whole thing is an absurdist's delight -- a French film set in a London that never was.
    writers_reign

    Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet

    Of the seven films written by Jacques Prevert and directed by Marcel Carne I have now seen five - and I have the published screenplay of 'Jenny' their initial collaboration and now the only one I have yet to see. This is the kind of film that brings out the hybridologist in reviewers, the Marx Brothers Meet Mel Brooks type of Screamers and it has to be said that the film does lend itself to that type of journo's trick. Of course any film written by Prevert and directed by Carne is going to be worth seeing whatever the story and whoever the cast. In terms of cast this is a doozy; Michel Simon, Francoise Rosay, Louis Jouvet, Jean-Louis Barrault, Jean-Pierre Aumont, on the surface the cream of French cinema between the wars, but if we stop and look again we realize that what we have here is a series of disparate acting styles so the logical question is what type of story can possibly accommodate this bizarre melange. Answer: Precisely the sort of story Prevert has supplied in which a group of top French actors are transplanted to Edwardian London and given names like Archibald Soper, Irwin Molyneux, William Kramps and, wait for it, Billy, The Milkman. Do we really need a plot after this? Well, in case the answer is yes how about a hypocritical bishop (Jouvet) who gets his kicks denouncing detective fiction (this was in its heyday in 1937, when the film was made, but hardly causing much of a stir in Edwardian England) whilst his cousin (Simon) leads a double life as a timid gardener who moonlights as a best-selling author of detective fiction. When Soper invites himself to lunch at his cousin's London home, the lady of the house (Francoise Rosay) having antagonised the staff to the point of their departure, prepares the meal herself and then, on grounds of rampant snobbery, absents herself for the duration. From this seemingly innocuous move Soper convinces himself that Molyneux has murdered his wife and the scene is set for things to spin in ever widening circles. Still a huge hit in France and shown regularly on TV it has never, to my knowledge, played in England. Seeing it for the first time in 2004 I was completely captivated and drawn into its spiralling plot. 9/10

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    Related interests

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    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Shot in 23 days.
    • Quotes

      The Bishop: Moi j'ai dit bizarre, bizarre ? Comme c'est étrange... Pourquoi aurais-je dit bizarre, bizarre ?

      Molyneux (Michel Simon): Je vous assure, cher cousin, que vous avez dit bizarre, bizarre.

      The Bishop: Moi j'ai dit bizarre ? Comme c'est bizarre...

    • Connections
      Featured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A francia lírai realizmus (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Complainte de l'Ignoble Molyneux
      Music by Maurice Jaubert

      Lyrics by Jacques Prévert

      Performed by Agnès Capri

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 20, 1939 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Drole de Drame
    • Filming locations
      • Studios Joinville, Joinville-le-pont, Val-de-Marne, France(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Productions Corniglion-Molinier
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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