Home > Adventure >

La Chèvre

AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

La Chèvre (1981)

July. 26,1985
|
7.3
| Adventure Comedy Crime
AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

When the boss' unlucky daughter is missing in South America, Campana is sent to watch the boss' most unlucky employee who is sent as a private detective in hopes he can duplicate the daughter's mistakes.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Interesteg
1985/07/26

What makes it different from others?

More
Buffronioc
1985/07/27

One of the wrost movies I have ever seen

More
Melanie Bouvet
1985/07/28

The movie's not perfect, but it sticks the landing of its message. It was engaging - thrilling at times - and I personally thought it was a great time.

More
Logan
1985/07/29

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

More
ElMaruecan82
1985/07/30

With so many scripts such as "The Tall Blond with a Black Shoe", "A Pain in the Ass" and the internationally acclaimed "The Birdcage", Francis Veber already confirmed in the 70's his status as one of the most promising and talented comedic screenwriters of French Cinema, the equivalent of Billy Wilder if we also take his directing into consideration. But in the early 80's, he had only directed one movie called "The Toy", starring Pierre Richard and released in 1976. And although the film was a modest commercial success, it was not until the release of "The Goat" in 1981 that Veber made his deserved entrance in French Comedy's Hall of Fame."The Goat" is now regarded as a classic of French comedy and a film that didn't lose its appeal after 30 years. Featuring for the first time the duo made of Gerard Depardieu and Pierre Richard, who would appear in two other films, the film uses the basic ingredients of the typical buddy movie with the funny guy and the straight one, in other words, the eternal "odd couple", but that's only on the surface, don't let yourself fooled by the poster. Behind the laughter, "The Goat" accomplishes something more impressive, it makes us care for the two characters and not just on a comedic aspect. Indeed, no matter how funny the gags are, what makes the film so impacting is the progressive bond going between Campana (Depardieu) and Perrin (Richard), who'll learn to get along despite their differences. Any other director would have made this material cliché, but Veber always finds the right note, and seems to get the best from the two lead actors, making the supporting cast more forgettable and guilty of providing a false feeling of B-movie. For instance, the movie is set in Mexico, but people there speak good French with no accent whatsoever, these details were perceived as futile precisely because the story was the most important.I don't want to make the film sound serious when it's indeed a great comedy, still funny and fresh by today's standards. My point is that the core of the film is the relationship transcended by Depardieu and Richard's incredible performances. Pierre Richard is like the 'Steve Martin' of French comedy, with a natural clown-face that made him the perfect lovable loser of French Cinema. Richard plays François Perrin, a modest accountant so unlucky and accident prone that no day of his life passes without him being victim of a misfortune. What could have lead to a series of goofy situations is not overdone in the film as the point is not Perrin's bad luck, but how his bad luck would lead to the rich businessman's daughter, Marie. This point is essential because it explains the failure of the dreadful American remake: "Pure Luck" (starring Danny Glover and Martin Short). Marie appears in the first scenes, she's kidnapped in Mexico and apparently suffers from the same bad-luck syndrome than Perrin. After many fruitless investigations, the father's psychologist suggests that the detective Campana goes back to Mexico with Perrin, feeling that this time, Perrin's bad luck would be the compass guiding them to Marie.We laugh at this premise that flirts with fantasy, and of course, Campana, the tough-guy detective played by Gerard Depardieu comfort our feelings and embodies our thoughts. He's a no-nonsense guy, reasonable and don't believe in luck or hazard, but It's a last-chance mission and Perrin, after having given a luminous demonstration of his daily bad luck through a funny test involving chairs, is chosen for "his remarkable intelligence and perspicacity" to look for Marie, with Campana as an assistant. The duo works perfectly, because Perrin is not naturally funny, but funny despite himself, he takes his role, his mission so seriously that he's incapable to realize his total incompetence. And we see him trough the condescending eyes of Campana. I read in the Trivia section that Depardieu wanted to play Perrin's part; this proves that he's one hell of an actor, but not much of a casting agent. Depardieu, as the duo's straight-man, is the one who makes the situations funny. When Perrin accidentally burns Campana's tie, it's funny okay but the look on Depardieu's deadpan face is the laugh-out-loud pay-off. Depardieu's reactions are almost as equally hilarious as Richard's clumsiness, if not more.And as the story progresses, and some of Richard's misadventures start to give clues about Marie's disappearance, we understand that the psychologist's theories are not without validity, but at this precise moment, the focus is more on Depardieu and Richard's odd couple, and its evolution, especially when Campana's confidence about the nonexistence of bad or good luck starts to be seriously shaken, through his companionship with Perrin. At one point, both are in jail with another prisoner, and then they're informed that every day, the guards take one prisoner to beat him badly, Depardieu's pitiful face while looking at Richard, made me laugh so hard, but the twist that went after literally killed me. If only for the 'prison part' which is pure comedy gold, the film deserves to be a classic among the classics. Although, I would have done it without some gags, like the inexcusable gorilla coming from nowhere, while there are no Apes in South America. Apart from this one, the rest works perfectly.And speaking of South America, the film also possesses an undeniable escapist value from the setting, something that would appeal to every audience, and it's beautifully served by whom I believe to be the greatest French composer ever: Vladimir Cosma. Cosma who scored Veber's films and some of the most classic French comedies beautifully conveys this mix of exoticness and melancholy in his theme and it perfectly serves the film's conclusion, which is as poetic and satisfying as any other movie's endings, magnificently closing the first opus of one of the most defining duos of French comedy: Gerard Depardieu and Pierre Richard.

More
MartinHafer
1985/07/31

Although the video box described the pairing in this movie as reminiscent of Laurel and Hardy, I think this is greatly overstating things. However, it is still a very good movie and worth your time.The story concerns the abduction of a VERY unlucky girl and the investigation into her disappearance. Gérard Depardieu is a competent kick-butt detective that is unable to find her after searching 42 days. Then a psychologist suggests to her rich father that they are going about searching in the wrong way--to find such an unlucky girl they should use a man equally as unlucky as they are bound to be drawn to each other! Silly as it may seem, this strategy seems to have something going for it, but Depardieu feels quite miffed that this boob, Pierre Richard, keeps blindly stumbling into important clues.While this is not the funniest movie, it certainly does offer quite a few laughs. When I find myself laughing out loud, I know it must be a pretty good comedy!FYI--I probably SHOULD take off another point from the score, as the movie had two stupid moments: in the jungle in Mexico, our heroes encounter a gorilla AND a cobra--this isn't even the right continent for either!!

More
writers_reign
1985/08/01

This was only Veber's second film as a double-threat (writer-director) and the first to employ the inspired casting of Gerard Depardieu and Pierre Richard. Its recent re-release on DVD to celebrate its 20th anniversary should make it accessible to a whole new generation too young to have caught it first time around. One only has to read the comments - almost exclusively raves - to guage the quality and I can only add one more voice, slightly hoarse from so much laughter in support. The concept is simplicity itself; take one accident-prone girl and because her father is an industrialist, ergo wealthy, let her predilection for bad luck result in her playing into the hands of kidnappers THEN, instead of hiring a team of SAS/mercenaries to track her down hire just One private investigator and supply him with a human bloodhound in the form of as big a dork as the missing girl. Pierre Richard breathes life into a dork who doesn't wait for a banana skin to trip on, he brings his own. Team him up with a pragmatic Gerard Depardieu who refuses to give house room to the concept of bad luck and just stand back and let them get on with it. The Mexican setting is largely irrelevant, it could just as well have been set in Marseilles but laffs are laffs wherever they occur. The ending is particularly effective - it's always something of a problem to end a story like this - as the two Dorks fall in love as expected but then Veber rounds it off with one last neat and very apposite visual gag. Not to be missed. 10/10

More
mercuryix
1985/08/02

If you want to see what comedy should be, instead of the gross-out humor passed off as comedy in movies like Austin Powers, see this film. This forgotten gem stars a very young Gérard Depardieu as adetective hired to find the missing daughter of a business. It is shot in the French tradition of visual comedy, and is very, very funny.POSSIBLE SPOILERS:Gérard's character, a no-nonsense detective who does not believe in superstitions or "luck", has been teamed with a hapless man whose life seems to disprove the notion that bad luck does not exist. The missing girl also has had a life of extraordinary mishaps, and her father believes that this poor schmuck will be like a guide dog leading Depardieu straight to her. Depardieu's mission becomes more and more simply trying to keep this poor shmoe alive as he searches for the businessman's daughter, and continues to disbelieve his claims of bad luck; until it starts to rub off on him. By the end of the film, he is a superstitious nervous wreck, and it is fun to see this handsome leading man developing a nervous tic and believing the smallest occurrences are "a sign" that something bad is about to happen. A long stream of unpredictable and inventive incidents occur throughout the movie that would convince anyone that carrying a lucky charm is not such a bad idea after all. The end is a masterpiece of French visual humor. If you like Depardieu, check this out sometime. There are worse ways (and movies) to spend your evening. By the way, Martin Short and Danny Glover remade this movie a few years ago, and it was not a tenth as funny as the original; proving that American screenwriters need to smarten up their writing. Seven stars for me.

More