The Valet (La Doublure)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Francis Veber (The Dinner Game and The Closet), the living master of French farce, has combined his classic elements of hilarious slapstick with quick-witted dialogue in the new film The Valet. The tale begins when François Pignon, (Gad Elmaleh) a restaurant car service valet at a posh Paris hotel gets caught-up in a billionaire industrialist's sneaky infidelities. Veber's plot quickly turns on the fall guy, when François – an innocent passerby - is photographed by a paparazzo leaving the hotel along with Pierre Levasseur (Daniel Auteuil), the wealthy tycoon and his beautiful supermodel mistress Elena (Alice Taglioni.
In a desperate attempt to avoid an ugly divorce with his wife Christine, (Kristin Scott Thomas) Pierre's scheming lawyer Maitre Foix (Richard Berry) concocts an outrageous plan. By paying the valet a large sum of money to live with Pierre's mistress, the two men hope to mislead the tabloids and most importantly hide the affair from his wife. Meanwhile, the ruthless Pierre must convince the stunning Elena to live with François in his cruddy apartment until the dust settles. All the while, continuing to reassure his wife that the other man in the photo, François, is really Elena's boyfriend.
Francis Veber's intricate and lively plot, tick-tock timing and variety of unusual characters make The Valet a hilariously good time.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #11407 in DVD
- Brand: Sony
- Released on: 2007-09-18
- Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
- Formats: AC-3, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: French
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 85 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
A light, zippy farce from Francis Veber (writer/director of The Closet and The Dinner Game), The Valet is another masterful comic escalation of lies and pretenses. When a billionaire (Daniel Auteuil, Cache, The Eighth Day) gets photographed next to his supermodel mistress (Alice Taglioni), he tries to persuade his wife (Kristin Scott Thomas, The English Patient) that the supermodel must be with the other man in the picture--a parking valet (Gad Elmaleh) who just happens to be walking by. Naturally, the billionaire has to follow through by setting the valet and the supermodel up as a couple, lest his wife's detective uncover the truth. The valet agrees, but not because he wants to cozy up to the beautiful girl; he hopes that the money he'll be paid will win the heart of the bookstore owner he's in love with (Virginie Ledoyen, The Beach, 8 Femmes). The sneaky machinations of the characters multiply and cascade with delicious results, particularly the hapless envy of the valet's best friend (Dany Boon, My Best Friend). The Valet isn't quite as brilliantly orchestrated as The Closet (some of the plot threads feel underbaked), but it's still sly and wonderfully engaging. Don't judge Veber by the hamfisted Hollywood remakes of his films Les Comperes and Le Jouet; Veber's films have a deft sweetness that American filmmakers just can't recreate. --Bret Fetzer
Customer Reviews
Genuinely funny
Genuinely funny all the way through. I DON"T watch films described as "hilarious", "zany" as I always find them, in my opinon, stupid. I like real people and real situations. This movie is genuinely funny and the characters are true to themselves. This movie has warm humor. Don't miss it.
A rather low-keyed French farce about trying to have your wife and mistress too
There is a scene in "The Lion in Winter" where Eleanor of Aquitaine is explaining the current royal machination and her son Geoffrey says: "I know. You know I know. I know you know I know. We know Henry knows, and Henry knows we know it." Geoffrey then offers a wicked smile and adds, "We're a knowledgeable family." I was remind of that line while watching "La Doublure" ("The Valet"), because in this 2006 French farce pretty much everybody knows what is going on, with the ironic exception of the guy who set all this nonsense into motion. In that regard writer-director Francis Veber's film is not a typical French farce where things are played broadly. As French farces go, "La Doublure" is rather sedate, which I thought actually worked for the film. Farce tends to make everybody look stupid, but Veber clearly decides to make one character the butt of this film.
That would be Pierre Lavasseur (Daniel Auteuil, "Un Coeur en Hiver"), the chief executive of a company with labor problems who is having an affair with a top model, Elena Simonsen (Alice Taglioni, "Grande Ecole"). Lavasseur's problems begin with a paparazzi takes a photograph that appears on the front page of a tabloid showing him with Elena. His wife, Christine (Kristin Scott Thomas, "The English Patient"), demands an explanation and all Levasseur can come up with is the lame excuse that he is just an innocent bystander, that he has no idea who the woman is, and that must have been with the other guy in the photograph. That would be Francois Pignon (Gad Elmaleh, "Gad Elmaleh Lautre C'est Moi"), who makes his modest living by parking cars, hence the film's title. Elena gives Levassuer an ultimatum to either divorce his wife and marry her, or forget about seeing her ever again. A divorce is problematic for Levassuer because his wife happens to be the majority stockholder in his company. Then his laywer, Maitre Foix (Richard Berry), suggests that the solution to all of these problems is to make the lie the truth by finding the innocent bystander in the photography and paying him to pretend he is Elena's lover.
Francois is in love with Emilie (Virginia Ledoyen, "The Beach"), who runs the local bookstore, but she thinks of him more like a brother. Besides, she is drowning in debt and does not need to marry somebody who has less money than she does. So when Foix shows up and makes the offer to Francois, he immediately demands a specific amount of money equal to that of Emilie's debts. Elena demands money herself: 20 million euros to go into a trust. If Levasseur divorces his wife, he gets the money back. So it is that Elena moves in with Francois, while both Levasseur and his wife have the faux couple spied upon.
Without even trying hard you can figure out the sort of things that are going to happen next, especially once Emilie sees Francois and Elena together, not to mention the possibilities when Francois and Elena have to sleep in a bed together. But "La Doublure" forgoes most of those commonplaces and pretty much fast-forwards through the rest. Francois and Elena quickly become friends and she is more than willing to help him with his romance of Emilie. Your assumption is that everybody has to maintain the masquerade with comedic results, but instead Veber makes sure that everybody is in on what is going on. Christine knows that what is happening with Francois and Elena is fake and they know that she knows it. In fact, the fun here is that the only one who does not know that everybody knows is Levasseur. The resolution is also relatively low-keyed, but by this point it is clearly Veber running against form. That might cut against the grain for those who embrace the full-fledged French farce, but I liked the change of pace enough to round up on "La Doublure" in the end.
Farce as only the French do it
Francois Pignon, director Francis Veber's quintessential bourgeois French character, makes yet another appearance in the 2007 film "The Valet." In four different films, four actors who have nothing physically in common portray the same character type. Pignon may suffer from a benign Weltschmerz living a routine existence in a one-track job. However, when external circumstances stress his system his natural ability to persevere activates and he comes out fighting for his life at full throttle. Think Daniel Auteuil as Pignon in "The Closet" as he battles a forced resignation from his place of employment by erroneously claiming he is homosexual.
In this latest manifestation, cool blue/green eyed actor Gad Elmaleh plays Pignon to perfection. His very inconspicuousness renders him conspicuous and sets in motion a madcap set of events that continually amuse in a formulaic class struggle that can be categorized as fluff but nevertheless works.
In "The Valet," Pignon is inadvertently positioned as the middleman between billionaire captain of industry Pierre Levasseur (Daniel Auteuil) and his mistress of two years, the breathtakingly lovely media-darling Elena, (Alice Taglioni). Supermodel Elena has given money-bags Pierre the expected divorce-your-wife ultimatum and he cleverly stalls with the help of his lawyer, M.Foix, a despicably jaded stereotype the creation of which Moliere would have been proud. Unfortunately for Levasseur, the proverbial stuff hits the fan when he is seen photographed with Elena in a national tabloid by his wife, Christine, the formidably intelligent beauty, Kristin Scott Thomas, who also happens to own 60% of the Lavasseur businesses. Serendipitously, Pierre's salvation comes in the form of a third person appearing in the photo---the unassuming Pignon, car valet for an expensive Parisian restaurant by the Eiffel Tower which Veber uses stunningly to accentuate the class differences. Lawyer Foix circumvents a messy expensive divorce between the Levasseurs, putting Christine into a dubious holding pattern while arranging for Elena and Pignon to live together and appear in public as a valid yet ludicrous odd couple.
A multitude of wonderfully funny side stories ensue: we watch fellow valet and roommate, the hysterically doubtful Richard (Dany Boon), gap with open-mouth middle class wonder at Pignon's new-found success with the rich, famous and gorgeous Elena. Emilie, (played by pretty Virginie Ledoyen of "The Beach") who previously thought of Pignon as a brother figure, gives him a second more serious look and finds herself incredulously rethinking his marriage proposal when she spots him at a local café with the blonde bombshell. Equally enjoyable are Pignon's parents---the mother, adorably vindicated as her fantasy regarding her son's appeal to the opposite sex seems a definite reality, plays off the more grounded father, a supposed pneumonia patient who gives up his bed for his hypochondriac doctor. Meanwhile, private detectives, paid lackeys, goggle-eyed waiters and an annoyed maitre d' add to the mayhem. As the count of dumbfounded onlookers increases and reports riddled with incorrect information is relayed back to Pierre his paranoia builds proportionately as he begins to question the ersatz relationship that he put together himself.
Bottom line? Director Francis Veber's film tells a completely modern story using predictable antics from the classical playbook of the great masters of satire. A light-hearted class struggle of sorts, the rich and the famous versus the behind-the-scenes nobodies, "The Valet" satisfies like an airy profiterole with dark chocolate sauce. No heavy whipped-up philosophical or political messages (thank heaven) intended here, so don't expect any. Being able to predict the outcome of certain setup situations makes this visually pleasing film all the more delicious. Guys, take delight in Alice Taglioni, one of two of the most beautiful women I have seen in film this year ---the other being Aishwarya Rai of Mistress of Spices. Laugh and enjoy---don't be put off by the rather abrupt ending. Recommended.
Diana Faillace Von Behren
"reneofc"




