This early film, written and starring France’s master of comedy, Jacques Tati, was directed by René Clément, a man who is not often associated with slapstick comedy. Years before he became a household name in France for his comic film creations, François the postman and Monsieur Hurlot, Tati was a popular comic performer on stage. This film features one of his most successful pre-WWII stage routines, that of the boxing fanatic taking on an imaginary (invisible?) opponent. Whilst not quite vintage Tati material, Soigne ton gauche features some side-splitting sequences which makes it a hugely entertaining and memorable short film. You wonder why Tati took so long to make a name for himself in cinema, when, on the basis of his performance in this film, he clearly has at least nine-tenths of the talent of those other great film slapstick comedians, Charlie Chaplin and Buston Keaton. The film’s closing scene, with the comic country postman cycling off into the distance, seems to presage Tati’s first notable work as a director, L’École des facteurs, made a decade later. —filmsdefrance
While an architecture student at Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Rene Clement painstakingly assembled the animated film Cesar les Galous. He made his live-action directorial debut in collaboration with Jacques Tati with the 1936 short Soigne ton Gauche. Clement spent the latter half of the 1930s filming documentaries in the French territories of Africa and Arabia. In 1937, he and archaeologist Jules Barthou were in Yemen preparing for the documentary short L’Arabie Interdite when they were captured, jailed and given death sentences. The two were freed and Clement returned to France with the film. In 1946, Clement acted as technical consultant on Jean Cocteau’s Beauty and the Beast (1946); this enabled him to finally direct a feature film on his own, the highly regarded “French resistance” melodrama La Bataille du rail, which blended the verisimilitude of Clement’s documentaries with the story-telling skills he’d gleaned from Cocteau. Though he’d begun his career with a cartoon and gained his… read more
The first live-action film directed by Clement was this collaboration with Tati, years before his legendary Hulot character was introduced to the world. It's a nice little short, slightly surreal, with Tati as the farm worker who spends a few minutes in the boxing ring as a sparring partner. Gentle anarchy follows resulting in the collapse of the rickety ring...