Looking for a comedy to improve my mood, I came across a gem of the genre – ‘Une ravissante idiote‘, the 1964 film by Édouard Molinaro. Many of the French comedies of that period are among my favorites, and now I am adding one more. 40 years before the films of the ‘Legally Blonde’ series, Édouard Molinaro offers us a parody of spy films with a blonde that gathers in her all the stereotypes of jokes about blondes and adds a few more. If this movie were made today, pretty much everything would work perfectly, except maybe the original title that wouldn’t pass the filters of political correctness. But then, in 1964, the role of the blonde was played by Brigitte Bardot.
The story takes place at a time when the cold war was in full swing and spies were prowling the streets of London, where the action happens. Harry Compton is a freshly fired bank clerk who is head over heels in love with the beautiful Penelope “Penny” Lightfeather. However, Harry is also the son of a couple of Soviet spies, and when he expresses his desire to emigrate to the Land of the Soviets, he is entrusted with a special mission – the theft of NATO naval plans in the event of a war. Back then such secrets were kept in real paper files with the code name of the plans on the cover! Penny also turns out to be a communist with a party card and as a seamstress she is well placed to break into the house of the high-ranking officer who keeps the plans in the safe box in his working room. The two lovers will soon have on their trail the agents and killers of the Soviet intelligence services, the police and agents of several British counterintelligence services. Their incompetence as amateurs and lovers will prove a formidable weapon. Their only weapon.
I liked the movie. The script emphasizes the comic scenes and highlights the two protagonists. Brigitte Bardot – BB – is in fantastic form, and Anthony Perkins demonstrates the nice guy qualities that made him one of the highest-rated film actors on the international stage at the time. The pairing of the two works well on screen – both comically and romantically. Around them swarm a lot of characters played by lesser-known actors, but all of them well chosen. Édouard Molinaro films with inventivity, playing with the camera, occasionally inserting freeze-frames or speed-ups. Everything at the right time and in good taste. The movie gave viewers of yesterday and today almost two hours of quality blonde entertainment.