Naughty Girl | |
---|---|
Directed by | Michel Boisrond |
Screenplay by | Roger Vadim Michel Boisrond |
Based on | an idea by Jean Perine |
Starring | Brigitte Bardot Jean Bretonnière Françoise Fabian |
Music by | Henri Crolla René Denoncin Hubert Rostaing |
Production companies | Lutetia SLPF Selb-Film Sonodis |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 86 mins |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Box office | 4,040,634 admissions (France)[1] |
Naughty Girl (French: Cette sacrée gamine), also released as Mam'zelle Pigalle, is a 1956 French CinemaScope musical film starring Brigitte Bardot.
Plot
Handsome cabaret entertainer Jean Clery is engaged to his psychiatrist, Lili. He sings at a nightclub owned by Paul Latour which is being used as a front for a gang of forgers.
Paul has been framed and decides to go to Switzerland to find out who is really behind this. He has a daughter, Brigitte, who is at finishing school and thinks he is a shipbuilder. Paul asks Jean to retrieve Brigitte from school and look after her for a few days so she is not caught up in the police investigation.
Jean collects Brigitte pretending to be her uncle and keeps her at his apartment. While there, Brigitte causes chaos, upsetting Jean's butler, starting a fire, getting arrested for swearing and winding up in prison, and causing troubles with Jean's engagement to Lili.
Eventually Brigitte and Jean fall in love and the real crooks are caught.
Cast
- Brigitte Bardot as Brigitte Latour
- Jean Bretonnière as Jean Clery
- Françoise Fabian as Lili Rocher-Villedieu
- Raymond Bussières as Jérôme
- Mischa Auer as Igor (ballet master)
- Michel Serrault as 2nd Inspector
- Jean Poiret as First Inspector
- Jean Lefebvre as Jérôme's pal
- Darry Cowl as Man with Suitcase
- Bernard Lancret as Paul Latour
- Marcel Charvey as Louis Dubrey
- Lucien Raimbourg as Older inspector Dupuis
- Robert Rollis as Gendarme
Production
According to Roger Vadim, producer Mr Senaumd had mostly made B movies. The producer had heard of a successful last minute rewrite Vadim did on Julietta and asked Vadim to perform a similar function on this film, which had been sold to Italy, but whose script star Jean Bretonniere did not like. Vadim agreed provided his then-wife Brigitte Bardot was cast as the female lead and if Michel Boisrond, René Clair's first assistant director, would direct. Vadim later wrote "for the first time, Brigitte played a character written for her, in modern language; and she had a classically trained director who was making his first film." He called the movie "a French equivalent of a Doris Day movie but with a bolder, more liberated edge."[2]
Reception
Box office
The film was a box-office hit in France, being the 12th most popular movie of the year. It was slightly more popular than And God Created Woman which Vadim directed later that year.[3]
Critical
The Observer wrote that the director "has learnt the knack of raising a simple laugh, not yet the art of touching heart and mind."[4] The Los Angeles Times praised the "tight, high speed direction."[5]
The New York Times wrote that the film:
Is full of slapstick and clumsy farce, and some oldish and splashy dance numbers. But it never piles up its effects in any one direction. Instead it keeps shifting key, from romance to melodrama to light comedy, back and forth. It presents nothing that can take the place of a serious study of Miss Bardot's form... The direction by Michael Boisrond seems rather fuzzy about whether or not Mam'zelle Pigalle should be a broad take-off on a Hollywood romantic melodrama. At the end, however, it seems this was the intention.[6]
References
- ^ Box office information for film at Box Office Story
- ^ Vadim, Roger (1986). Bardot, Deneuve, Fonda. Simon and Schuster. p. 78.
- ^ Box office figures in France for 1956 at Box Office Story
- ^ "War and Peace". The Observer. London. Nov 4, 1956. p. 11.
- ^ Warren, Geoffrey M. (May 12, 1958). "Brigitte's Back Again". Los Angeles Times. p. C10.
- ^ Review of film at New York Times