FeistyUpper
If you don't like this, we can't be friends.
Lumsdal
Good , But It Is Overrated By Some
Kamila Bell
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Zandra
The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.
dlee2012
"Ah! Les Belles Bacchantes" (known in the English-speaking world as "Peek-a-Boo") is a fitfully amusing French farce about a police officer investigating a music hall revue and eventually becoming part of the troupe.Released in the same year as Renoir's "French Can Can" it is interesting to compare the two films. Certainly Renoir was more clearly emulating the Hollywood style of big budget musicals while this film is much more low key and far less ambitious. Nevertheless, it also gives a more realistic insight into the style of musical hall acts of the era. Free of the puritanical censorship employed in the Anglo-speaking world, many of the acts portrayed are genuinely amusing, albeit highly banal. The nudity is appropriate to the story and completely inoffensive and non- sexual and, indeed, makes for some amusing slapstick.Good use is made of the limited sets and the conceit of almost the entire film consisting of a rehearsal of the stage show is clever and works well. Indeed, the dialogue and story are weak and are really just a framing device for this string of "rehearsals" of acts. The moment when the character breaks the "fourth wall" at the end is especially delightful. In effect, the audience are doubly-distanced from the action in that we are watching a film of a rehearsal. Like the policeman, we are spying on the action that is not yet meant for public consumption. By breaking the fourth wall at the end, the performers tell us they were aware of our presence all along and that we have been welcomed to watch. Unlike the policeman, however, we are only observers and can never truly take part in the show. The best that can happen is the characters can address us directly but we cannot address them back. In this way, the film draws attention to one of cinema's great weaknesses compared to live performances: we are passive consumers, not participants on any level.In conclusion, despite the obvious budget limitations and workmanlike direction and cinematography, this is a genuinely delightful comedy that plays with notions of what is a real performance, what is a rehearsal and who are the audience and who are the participants. A true delight.NOTE: Many viewers may be confused about why the policeman character makes bizarre clucking sounds throughout the film. This is because the police are nicknamed "chickens" in France, just as they are derogatorily called "pigs" in England and Australia.
Varboro
I definitely can't agree with the previous comments. This movie is very good and very funny. It's not a De funès Movie, but a Branquignol's one, with Robert Dhery as himself, Colette brosset as a delicious ingénue, and De Funès is "le poulet" ( the chicken, this is the name we give to the policemen). He has only a supporting role. Of course, Mario David is the beautiful muscular man, jacqueline Maillan is herself ( Madame Maillan, the proprietary of the theatre) and Jacques Jouanneau the régisseur. Raymond Bussières is as good as usual,playing Raymond le plombier... the scene with Rosine Luguet at the beginning is really funny,and when he speaks to Robert Dhery about the diameter of the tubes it's very realistic. I'd say Jacques Legras ( as himself) is the main character. He is very good. Too bad he didn't make a great career later.Well, the choreography is a parody of french music hall. Don't expect it to be good. it is not a musical movie but a parody. The 'défilé sans robes'(the dresses didn't come in time, so the girls make the show in underwear but Jacques Legras makes comment about the non existent taffetas dresses) is hilarious. Overall it is a good funny movie, a good adaptation of the stage performance.There are many nude scenes, but this is no problem as it is quite normal for a french cabaret ( only Americans can pretend to make a movie about french cabaret without naked girls).Louis de funès became a big star later.... In Pouic Pouic He was the husband of Jacqueline Maillan, and in Le petit Baigneur we find again Robert Dhery, Colette Brosset and Jacques Legras.... In Oscar mario David plays the same role, in "le grand restaurant" there is the same pianist and so on. This movie is full of reference for later movies of De Funès. I must admit only french from France can get all the fun from this movie and it is for limited audience, but it's from a time, and made by people who didn't even think their movie could be watched overseas or could last for 50 years. 'Vos gueules les mouettes' and 'Allez France' or les tontons flingueurs are better references (IMO) than la cage aux folles.
LeRoyMarko
Ouch! What were they thinking? This movie is so bad, it's scary. It's strictly a showcase for beautiful women. In fact, its only originality is probably the amount of nudity for the time.Louis De Funès' talent is wasted. He's reduce to imitate a chicken. Which is funny, but to carry it on for the entire film is absurd and stupid. Oh! and by the way... the musical numbers are awful. Skip this one, by all mean.Out of 100, I give it 51. That's good for 0 star out of 4.Seen at home, in Toronto, on November 5th, 2002.
MarioB
I was expecting a B-Movie French musical. After all, Dhéry, Blanche, DeFunès were superstars of low budget French films of that time. And it is in color! But I have hallucination in this unbelievable one hour 30 of pure mediocrity. Musical numbers are awful, and comedy is absolutely boring and stupid. And the songs? What songs? This is just a succession of bad numbers, one after another. The only one very rare thing about that thing is the nudity of women. It was not familiar at that time. In fact, some numbers are just there to show us topless women. It adds to the mediocrity! And try to find young Michel Serrault, the future great actor of French cinema, in a bit part as a musician, in his very first movie. Good luck!