La Chèvre
La Chèvre (English title: Knock on Wood, literal translation: The She-goat) is a 1981 buddy cop comedy film written and directed by Francis Veber, starring Pierre Richard and Gérard Depardieu. It is the first of three films featuring Richard and Depardieu as a comic duo. It’s an international co-production film between France and Mexico. An American remake of this film was made in 1991, starring Martin Short and Danny Glover, entitled Pure Luck. PlotMarie Bens, the daughter of a CEO of a large company, is kidnapped while on vacation in Acapulco. The police investigation yields no results, so her father hires Campana (Gérard Depardieu), an imposing private detective specializing in disappearances, who spends a month in Mexico without finding a single lead. Desperate, Mr. Bens finally listens to a rather original idea from Meyer, the company psychologist. According to him, Campana is too "normal" to find Marie. The only way to succeed would be to send someone who shares her most notable trait: incredible bad luck. Meyer has identified the perfect candidate: François Perrin (Pierre Richard), an accountant whose life has been an endless series of mishaps. To illustrate his point, the psychologist conducts an impromptu test: he summons Perrin and asks him to sit at a large table. Faced with many empty chairs, Perrin hesitates and then chooses the one that is broken, causing him to fall. Feeling he has nothing to lose, Mr. Bens asks Perrin to take over the investigation, giving him carte blanche and the detective's help. Despite his reluctance to go along with this ridiculous plan, Campana eventually agrees to set off with Perrin, who takes his new role with utmost seriousness. Perrin's misadventures begin from the moment they arrive at Orly airport and continue more and more in Mexico, much to the dismay of Campana, who is both incredulous and exasperated by his sidekick. However, this accumulation of setbacks fortuitously puts them on the trail of Marie Bens' kidnapper, a man named Juan Arbal. Campana and Perrin eventually track him down, but Arbal is shot dead by his own gang to prevent him from talking. The two Frenchmen are subsequently arrested by the local police, who mistake them for the murderers, and Campana suffers a beating, beginning to fear he has been “contaminated” by Perrin's bad luck. Once they regain their freedom, they help to arrest Fernando, the gang's leader. He admits he doesn't know the fate of the captive, as the small plane transporting her to a hideout has vanished over the rainsforest, explaining the lack of a ransom demand. Considering the Bens girl dead, Campana wants to abandon the investigation, but Meyer convinces everyone to try one last gamble: put Perrin in a plane and fly him over the jungle. Yet another twist of fate forces the plane to make an emergency landing in the middle of nowhere. Disturbed by the developments, Campana agrees to continue exploring the forest by Jeep, following Perrin’s intuitive leads. However, they soon find themselves hopelessly lost, the fuel tank running dry. Frustrated and tired of taking orders from Perrin, Campana reveals to the accountant that he is not really in charge but just a "goat", serving as bait for bad luck. The two men come to blows, but Perrin inadvertently knocks himself out and slips into a coma. Rescued by locals, they are taken to a mission for Perrin to receive care. The detective takes the opportunity to call Meyer and tell him he is definitively halting the search. Meanwhile, in the infirmary, Perrin wakes up next to another patient, also shot in the head, who turns out to be Marie Bens. Disoriented, walking hand in hand like two sleepwalkers, the unlucky pair head for a pontoon bridge on the river. The dock collapses, and they drift away, watched in astonishment by Campana. Cast
Release history and facts
The movie is infamous in Italy for the Cinema Statuto fire in Turin in which it was projected, killing 64 people. ReceptionThe film received favorable reviews, with praise for Richard and Depardieu's performances, story and humour. The film was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film of 1985 by the U.S. National Board of Review of Motion Pictures.[1] References
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