Le sauvage (1975) Poster

(1975)

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Watchable Catherine Deneuve flick, also starring Yves Montand :) and shot at "exotic Venezuela" :)
stuka2411 December 2011
Nelly (Catherine D.) is not your average good girl in this somewhat unusual movie. A former ... easy woman, had a "house" with two friends in Paris, then for some reason moved to Venezuela (!) working in a trendy night bar, but the first scene of the movie is her desperate present: she's been married, ostensibly unwillingly, to a crass rich vulgar ... Italian, extended family included. Even if her past is not exactly blameless, she looks them down haughtily, like a princess. Next thing she's doing is leaving on the middle of the wet Caracas night, which makes her come across our hero Martin, (Yves M.), and a mysterious and friendly looking American tourist. They all play an important part in this movie, of which I've only told you the first 5 minutes... :).

If your view of Latin America includes corruption, urban car chases in streets without people, mafiosos, everybody shouting in Spanish *(including princess Deneuve), breaking everything at offices, brawls in bars, thefts, huge curly haired locals, burning things, greed, talks about money all the time, American companies exploiting locals, yes "Amigo", this is your film :).

Ironies apart, while not exactly a very welcoming view of Venezuela, we do get to see the clearest water, a paradisiacal island, modern highways, and -for the time- those big, oil thirsty big American cars that could only be standard in an oil rich country :).

Some films are able to be reasoned out, this is obviously not that kind :). If you accept the premises, I agree with other IMDb reviewers that as a "physical comedy" it fares pretty well. Who cares if the main characters (Nelly and Martin) change completely from scene to scene, from aloofness to giddy love, in turns, but asyncronously, so as to fill an hour and a half? Who want to know why is Martin so good at so many disparate and very difficult abilities, from top notch perfume making to building ships alone, drawing like an architect, or making an elaborate system for watering his ample vegetable garden, fighting and actually defeating thugs like mosquitoes, and yes, being able to resist Catherine D., probably one of the most beautiful women on the planet, on a desert island, like if there really were more important things to do :). Like raising chicken, for instance :). Why did Martin leave his important job and enigmatic rich American wife (Dana Wynter)? In short, who wants a plot when you can have Deneuve :)? I agree with IMDb reviewer "eva25at from Vienna" that the scenes where she is trying to win him over are funny, like the one with the rebellious chicken, or when she is astonished at watching real tomatoes "from the plant"... Nelly doesn't know much about farming :).

We do get to see Catherine's legs and skittish movements, and for those so inclined, a decent torso (Yves'), rather well kept for his age (54 years old).

Enjoy without qualms!

PS: As a bonus, we get to see Deneuve's bosom, but you'll have to watch this film for more than an hour to get it. Worth the wait, if you ask me :).
24 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Call it Savage(ly funny)
JasparLamarCrabb15 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Jean-Paul Rappeneau's extremely entertaining comedy stars Yves Montand as a disenchanted perfume executive who has his private island (and his ENTIRE life) invaded by flighty Catherine Denueve. She's escaping a pending marriage to hot-blooded lunatic Luigi Vannucchi and proceeds to make Montand's life miserable. Rappeneau's film is so chock full of mayhem, it reaches giddy peaks. A fun, nearly slapstick comedy with undeniable chemistry between the stars. Montand is in top form and Denueve is shockingly loose. Vannucchi is appropriately madcap, stealing each scene he's in. Tony Roberts is also in it and gets a lot of laughs as Deneuve's unsavory ex-boss. Bobo Lewis plays a crafty and unlikely private investigator. A great, very international (it's filmed in Venezuela, NYC and France) comedy.
9 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Deneuve is a Goddess
elo-equipamentos12 May 2017
After an unsuccessful engagement party Nelly (Catherine Deneuve) leaves his fiancée and hiding in the Hotel, meeting Martin (Yves Montand) who help her to run of his angry and abandoned Italian guy, so she goes to your former Boss to receive your money for late payment, but he doesn't pays her, so she has to stolen a expensive and famous Toulouse Lautrec's painting and looking Martin again to sell it, but he didn't have enough money, somehow end up on a isolate island where Martin lives an easy life, now he has to send away this disturbed woman, to lives in peace!!! Silly but watchable Romantic comedy from these great french actors.
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Deneuve does screwball comedy
taylor988522 March 2002
After thirty, I suppose a legend is able to do pretty much what she wants. Here, Catherine Deneuve, tiring of being the glacial Grace Kelly type for Bunuel, Truffaut et les autres opts for very effective physical comedy alongside Yves Montand.

They do Cary Grant-Katharine Hepburn-style farcical routines very well. Deneuve, escaping from her frenetic fiance, hooks up with Montand, who is himself fleeing marital and business entanglements. Tony Roberts, seen in Woody Allen films of the period, does very well as the club owner from whom Deneuve steals a Toulouse-Lautrec, and who must track down the dizzy blonde in Venezuela to get it back. Jean-Paul Rappeneau's direction is accomplished and the scenery is gorgeous. There is a car chase that actually is funny, and I can't recall the last one that made me laugh.
26 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Silly but Funny
claudio_carvalho22 November 2015
In Caracas, Nelly (Catherine Deneuve) is engaged of Vittorio (Luigi Vannucchi). However, after the engagement party with his family, she calls off the commitment and flees from him lodging in a hotel. Vittorio pursues her but the middle-aged French guest Martin (Yves Montand) helps Nelly. She seeks out her former employer Alex Fox (Tony Roberts), who owns a night-club and owes one-year salary to her, but he does not help her. Nelly steals a valuable painting from his office and heads back to the hotel, hiding in Martin's room. He gets a ticket to Paris for her and leaves her at the airport. Then he sails on his boat to an island where he lives alone. When Martin arrives, he finds Nelly waiting for him in his house. She explains that customs did not allow her to leave Venezuela with the painting. Soon his peaceful life of hermit becomes Hell on Earth, but they fall in love with each other. However Vittorio and Alex are still chasing her.

"Le sauvage" is a silly but funny romantic comedy. Catherine Deneuve is gorgeous and her devilish character is totally amoral. There is no reason why men fall for her but her beauty. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "O Selvagem" ("The Savage")
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Le Sauvage : A good 'commercial film' directed by Jean-Paul Rappeneau.
FilmCriticLalitRao14 August 2014
For viewers outside of France,French film industry is identified by its 'art cinema' as well as its 'commercial cinema'.This is an important distinction to pigeonhole films as it enables viewers to choose films based on their personal tastes. Apart from the general film festival circuit, there is also a huge market for "French commercial films". This has created the perception that commercial films made in France are as entertaining, intelligent and meaningful as art films which have changed the shape of cinema. French director Jean-Paul Rappeneau is a director whose films have always oscillated between realms of art and commercial. The success of his third film "Le Sauvage" proved that even commercial films can convey a lot of useful information about human beings and the societies in which they live. For this film,fast paced action is a big virtue as leading pair of Yves Montand and Catherine Deneuve use all available emotions to entertain their audiences. One has to carefully watch the dogged determination with which Catherine Deneuve is able to get herself out of complex situations. Although Yves Montand's character prefers to lead a lonely yet simple life, it has been dubbed 'savage' due to the use of his 'savage force in rescuing Catherine Deneuve. Although the end is a trifle disappointing, Le Sauvage must be on all those viewers' wish list who would like to learn while getting entertained.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Nice scenery....oh, and Catherine Deneuve's character is Satan.
planktonrules8 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Ugghh. I love French films but truly disliked this film. Considering it stars Catherine Deneuve and Yves Montand, you sure would expect it to be well written and engaging. Well, unfortunately, it's not. In fact, for much of the film, I truly hated Catherine Deneuve's character--so much that I was longing for Montand to kill her...slowly and very painfully! This is NOT a good thing if you are trying to make this film a romantic comedy!!

The film starts with Deneuve marrying an obnoxious Italian man who behaves like a mobster with less self-control than Joe Pesci in GOODFELLAS. Through most of the film, he yells and behaves like a Moose during rutting season. It's no wonder, then, that Deneuve soon disappears--realizing she made a mistake. However, in a "kooky" move, she spends the next half of the movie using every man that comes near her. Her old boss (Tony Roberts) owes her some money, so she steals his Toulouse-Lautrec painting (worth many, many times what he owes her). When nice guy Montand hears Deneuve and her husband arguing like hyenas, he comes to help her--and she manages to nearly get him killed, uses him to get plane fare and never once says thanks.

At this point, I am seriously wondering if I've ever hated any woman in a film this much in recent memory...but it gets much worse. Instead of taking the plane, she sneaks off to an island where Montand lives very happily all alone. She never asks to stay but begins acting like the island is hers. He gets angry and puts her aboard his boat to take her back to the mainland and she responds by getting an axe and tearing the hull apart--sinking his boat and stranding them on the island. After that, other "amusing" things she does is steal his food, tries to lock him in the basement and take the house for herself and pouts...a lot. I'm thinking to myself that there is nothing funny or romantic about any of this, yet oddly they then sleep together. She responds by then ignoring him for most of the rest of this film. What a wretched, demanding and self-absorbed "lady".

Late in the film, Deneuve's husband finds her and takes her back. Oddly, you'd think Montand would be thrilled but since this is a romantic comedy, he then realizes how much he loves her (!?) and goes looking for her once he's able to get off the island! What a contrived and witless script!! Sadly, while Deneuve was the main focus of the film, her selfish character was pretty but 100% vacuous and unlikable. On the other hand, Montand had a wonderful backstory that was interesting...too bad there wasn't nearly enough time to delve into it and explore it completely--especially when after being taken to New York, he suddenly magically returns to Venezuela (where most of the film occurred). This is a great case of "scene missing here" logic! Overall, you've got a script so horrible that Julia Roberts would even refuse to be in such a contrived and unlikable romance. Badly written and a total waste of the stars' considerable talents. This is just brainless and hard going from start to contrived finish.
12 out of 31 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Pity about the Lautrec.
brogmiller11 December 2022
Jean-Paul Rappeneau made an auspicious directorial debut in 1965 with 'La Vie de Chateau', a delightfully comic view of the Nazi occupation which made it a forerunner to films such as 'La Grande Vadrouille'. Fast forward twenty five years and he directed the definitive version of 'Cyrano de Bergerac'. In the interim he directed only three films, all of them comedies where the rather juvenile humour of his first film has been carried to extremes in which frantic is deemed funny and featuring silly slapstick, hysteria, numerous punch-ups and rat-a-tat delivery.

Two of these starred the charismatic Yves Montand and this is undoubtedly the better of the two. He is here partnered by Catherine Deneuve who had previously worked with Rappeneau on 'La Vie de Chateau'. Her presence guarantees that despite the frenetic goings on Romance will blossom and l'Amour conquer all. Montand's scruffy, unshaven Robinson Crusoe character whose peaceful island existence is shattered by a wilful, strong-minded and sexy female would seem a nod to Cary Grant in 'Father Goose' but whereas Grant and his girl Friday Leslie Caron are threatened by the Japanese, here Deneuve is pursued by a jilted fiancé and Montand is being tracked by his estranged wife. The fiancé is portrayed as a one-dimensional, hot-headed Italian caricature whose solution to every problem is to hit someone whereas the wife is a powerful business tycoon whose motive seems more financial than emotional and who is played by the classy Dana Wynter.

The film is evidently inspired by Hollywood films of the 'screwball' variety and the talented Mlle Deneuve acquits herself very well in an atypical role. Based upon the principle of 'horses for courses' it is best not to compare her with the likes of Carole Lombard and Jean Arthur who excelled in this particular genre. Her chemistry with Montand is palpable as it is in their only other film together, 'Les Choix des Armes.' No doubt with a view to the box office there is an utterly gratuitous shot of her breasts but of course, who's complaining?

Monsieur Montand is as engaging and beguiling in this as he was to be in Rappeneau's next film and in Claude Sautet's seldom seen 'Garcon'. It is a pity that he was not granted the opportunity to do more comedy whilst it is probably kinder to pass over in silence his appearance in 'Let's make love' which calls to mind the phrase 'a fish out of water'.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Montand redeems this film...
SaraFGH110 September 2018
Although if I'd been him, I'd have let the monster have her much sooner. Nice twist with his back story but Nelly definitely wasn't worth all the trouble.
1 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Scent Of A Woman
writers_reign23 May 2004
Recipe for escapist film: Take one top writer (Jean-Loup Dabadou), add one top director (Jean-Paul Rappeneau), season with a brace of A-list vedettes (Yves Montand, Catherine Deneuve), and a dash of screwball and voila! Eat! Enjoy! A guy who has quit the perfume business and found that the Grasse is greener in the islands, a gal running away from a vitriolic Italian, a stolen Lautrec, a bearded Montand, a gorgeous Deneuve, an island idyll. What more do you want. You DO want more? Gee, some people are NEVER satisfied. How about Tony Roberts doing the Tony Randall/Gig Young stooge to Doris Day-James Garner-Rock Hudson spot and proving up to snuff. NOW will you go see it and do yourself a favor. This is a million miles away from Godard pretentiousness and all the better for it. 9/10
33 out of 45 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
good in the 1970s, good in the 2020s
dromasca11 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Jean-Paul Rappeneau made only eight feature films in his entire career as a director. However, each of them has a special charm, and in all of them you can feel the hand of a professional director, who knows the secrets of the job but especially who knows how to work with actors. 'Le sauvage' (the English title is 'Lovers Like Us') made in 1975, is a romantic comedy whose story takes place in an exotic landscape. Many films of this kind have been made - American and French in particular - but this one remained in the memory of viewers who saw it almost 50 years ago and has a good chance of being enjoyed by contemporary audiences as well. Much of the credit goes to the two stars - Catherine Deneuve and Yves Montand - whose spell has remained intact.

The story begins in Caracas, Venezuela. Nelly, a beautiful French blonde, flees away from her impending marriage to an Italian with mafioso manners and with an overwhelming family. On the way, she steals a Toulouse-Lautrec painting from her former patron. In a hotel in the city, she meets by chance Martin, a rather strange and very unshaven man, who helps her escape from her pursuers and catch a flight to Paris. Neither she nor the painting pass the customs officers at the airport, and the two will find themselves (to the man's surprise) on the off-shore island in the Caribbean where Martin leads a Robinson-like life. The inevitable will occur, but many other surprising adventures will also take place, as Martin is also constantly being followed and has his own personal reasons for fleeing the 'civilized' world.

Almost everything works perfectly in Rappeneau's film. The dialogues are well written, funny all the time, with a drop of melodrama when needed, making the bond between the two heroes believable. In many films of this kind the relationships between older men and young and sparkingly beautiful women have something artificial, but not here. Catherine Deneuve is charming and makes us forget to wonder that she is always well made up and coiffed, even though she is on an isolated island. Yves Montand radiates the magnetism that made him play numerous roles of irresistible heart-breakers despite his physique far from ideal. The two make up a pair of shrews who tame each other, in deeds and with delicious dialogues. Action scenes have pace and humor, and car chases with 1960s American cars fueled by 1970s Venezuelan oil will delight retro car lovers. Michel Legrand's music and Pierre Lhomme's visuals fit perfectly into the production. 'Le sauvage' is a good entertainment film made in the 1970s which remains a good entertainment film for 2020s viewers.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Multilingual misfire
gridoon202428 February 2021
Vibrantly photographed, with a more casual, less refined than usual Catherine Deneuve (in one of her rare forays into slapstick comedy) at her most beautiful, but shrill, mostly unfunny, and way overlong; the would-be husband's character (an Italian caricature) is particularly unendurable. *1/2 out of 4.
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed