After getting an inheritance in Strasbourg, a good and naive countryman from Auvergne, decides to bring it to full fruition by buying a bus.After getting an inheritance in Strasbourg, a good and naive countryman from Auvergne, decides to bring it to full fruition by buying a bus.After getting an inheritance in Strasbourg, a good and naive countryman from Auvergne, decides to bring it to full fruition by buying a bus.
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André Cagnard
- Petit rôle
- (uncredited)
Jean Carmet
- L'homme qui veut acheter l'autobus
- (uncredited)
Maurice Chevit
- Un syndicaliste
- (uncredited)
René Havard
- Petit rôle
- (uncredited)
Alain Janey
- Petit rôle
- (uncredited)
Roger Lumont
- Un homme d'affaires
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Featured review
The eponymous Auvergnat inherits a fortune and travels to Strasbourg to collect it. His initial adventures show that he is shrewd but totally out of touch with modern city life. He takes the number 9 bus to Kehl, the little German city just across the River Rhine, to meet Lisbeth, the young woman he played with when they were children. She seems willing to marry him for his money.
When he spends most of his fortune on buying the bus from the ticket officer, some of the ensuing complications are easily predictable. But most are not. Via the notary who handled the inheritance, the Auvergnat gets into contact with two local businessmen who he infects with the bus-buying craze. And that's about as much as I should reveal about the plot.
The mad intricacy of the plot and a cringe factor that is out of this world are both the film's strength and its weakness. I am not sure I would want to watch this film again if my French was good enough to have understood all the details the first time round.
The film takes place in Strasbourg in winter and includes some scenic views of the city in the 1960s, though not half enough for my taste. I don't know what it is, but despite being contemporary with Hibernatus (1969) and in color, this film feels at least as old-fashioned to me as The Little World of Don Camillo (1952). (Though of course not as good. That would be a very high bar.) This may be intentional, as it fits the theme.
The protagonist is played by Fernand Raynaud. Unfortunately it was his last film, as he died in a car accident.
Many of the other faces are very familiar. For example, the ticket officer is better known as one of the gendarmes of Saint-Tropez; their boss appears here as a policeman who objects to being called a gendarme.
When he spends most of his fortune on buying the bus from the ticket officer, some of the ensuing complications are easily predictable. But most are not. Via the notary who handled the inheritance, the Auvergnat gets into contact with two local businessmen who he infects with the bus-buying craze. And that's about as much as I should reveal about the plot.
The mad intricacy of the plot and a cringe factor that is out of this world are both the film's strength and its weakness. I am not sure I would want to watch this film again if my French was good enough to have understood all the details the first time round.
The film takes place in Strasbourg in winter and includes some scenic views of the city in the 1960s, though not half enough for my taste. I don't know what it is, but despite being contemporary with Hibernatus (1969) and in color, this film feels at least as old-fashioned to me as The Little World of Don Camillo (1952). (Though of course not as good. That would be a very high bar.) This may be intentional, as it fits the theme.
The protagonist is played by Fernand Raynaud. Unfortunately it was his last film, as he died in a car accident.
Many of the other faces are very familiar. For example, the ticket officer is better known as one of the gendarmes of Saint-Tropez; their boss appears here as a policeman who objects to being called a gendarme.
- johannesaquila
- Jun 4, 2022
- Permalink
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Top Gap
By what name was L'auvergnat et l'autobus (1969) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer