As portrayed in yet another costume drama from France, Pierre Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais
-- late 18th-century French playwright, wit, magistrate, spy, war merchant -- is less
a scoundrel than he is a troublemaker, stirring up the masses with a revolutionary
fervor avant le déluge. Whether Beaumarchais, the Scoundrel engages in a bit
of revisionist history is something for the scholars to debate; the lofty pedestal
upon which it places its populist title character is surely exaggerated. As a film,
it's merely serviceable, relating the milestones in the seminal period of Beaumarchais'
life prior to the French Revolution as if they were historical hoops through which
to jump. (Of course, that's the paradoxical problem with most movies taken from the
pages of history. They relate events as discrete chapters, with rarely a unifying
thread, because to do otherwise might be intellectually compromising, although artistically
satisfying.) That is not to say, however, that the film doesn't illuminate Beaumarchais
as an interesting historical and cultural footnote; his greatest accomplishments
were penning the social satires, The Marriage of Figaro and The Barber of Seville,
both of which found even greater resonance as operas, and -- according to the film,
mind you -- he is almost single-handedly responsible for arming the American colonists
in the early days of the Revolutionary War. In the title role, Luchini plays the
part with a knowing, charismatic mischief that often comes across as Gallic smugness,
as if to say: "It's a French thing, you wouldn't understand." (One wonders how an
actor with more gravity, such as Depardieu, would have handled the character.) Still,
Luchini's presence thankfully keeps the movie from becoming too self-reverential,
even when he must utter dialogue bordering on the pretentious. In the end, the rather
workmanlike Beaumarchais, the Scoundrel doesn't do justice to the spirit of its provocateur.
Rather than provoke the status quo, it unwittingly preserves it, just one more historical
drama seemingly dominated by clothes and sets, rather than three-dimensional people.
2.0 stars
--Steve Davis
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