Trafic
Trafic is a 1971 comedy film directed by Jacques Tati. Trafic was the last film to feature Tati's famous character of Monsieur Hulot, and followed the vein of earlier Tati films that lampooned modern society.
Tati's use of the word "trafic" instead of the usual French word for car traffic may derive from a desire to use the same franglais he used when he called his previous film Playtime, and the primary meaning of trafic is "exchange of goods", rather than "traffic" per se. The word "Trafic" was subsequently used for a light utility vehicle model manufactured by Renault starting in 1981.
Plot
Monsieur Hulot is a bumbling automobile designer who works for Altra, a Paris auto plant. He is tasked to transport a new camper-car of his design to an international auto show in Amsterdam. He is accompanied by Marcel, a truck driver, and Maria, an American publicity agent. On the way there, the transport truck has a flat tire and Hulot humorously replaces one near the edge of the road. Shortly after, the truck runs out of fuel. Hulot retrieves fuel from a nearby gas station. They stop at another gas station, where attendants hand out busts of historical figures to customers. Meanwhile, Maria arrives at the auto show but drives back. The truck is fixed, and Hulot meets Maria along the way. The truck drives through customs along the Belgium–Netherlands border without stopping. Customs agents alert the police, and the truck is stopped by police along a freeway.The truck is impounded by the police who are suspicious that it has been stolen. At the police station, Hulot and Marcel display the innovative features of the camper-car to the officers, including a pullout tent in the back and a grille that becomes a barbecue grill. While they are impressed, the police do not allow the truck to leave. The next morning, Hulot, Marcel, and Maria retrieve the correct paperwork and the transport truck is allowed to leave. Back on the freeway, the truck is involved in a traffic-circle chain-reaction accident. Hulot helps a drunk elderly man who crashed his car and returns him home to his wife. By nighttime, the truck is taken to a garage on the countryside for repair. There, some teenaged pranksters steal Maria's fluffy dog and place a similar appearing faux fur jacket underneath her sports car, making her think her pet has been killed. Hulot realizes the joke and Maria locates her real dog. The men watch a moon-landing on television causing further delays in fixing the car.
A few days pass and the truck is fixed and back on the road. However, when they arrive at the auto show, they learn the event is over. Despite the camper-car not arriving on time, the Altra director is enraged he has been charged an electric bill for 300,000 francs. After playing around with a DAF 55, Hulot is fired by the director. In the parking lot, Marcel has unloaded the camper-car and a crowd has gathered making orders. Marcel shouts that the camper-car is a success. Unfazed by this, Hulot walks with Maria to the subway station and after they part and he heads down stairs, he is forced back upwards by commuters heading in the opposite direction. He ends up back in her arms, where they walk off together in a parking lot full of identical umbrellas and nearly identical cars on a rainy day.
Cast
- Jacques Tati as Monsieur Hulot
- Tony Knepper as Mechanic
- Franco Ressel
- Mario Zanuelli
- Maria Kimberly as Maria
- Marcel Fraval as Truck driver
- Honoré Bostel as ALTRA director
- F. Maisongrosse as François
Reception
Jonathan Romney, in his Criterion Collection essay, felt "Tati certainly appears less in control than in the vast coordinated ballet of Play Time. For the most part, the jokes in Trafic drum up a sense of languid, almost apathetic chaos, without there always being conventional payoffs to give the comic business a sense of purpose." Gary Giddins disagreed with Romney's assessment in his book Warning Shadows, writing that he believes Trafic to have been "transcendent," as well as "misperceived" and "neglected." Another review felt Trafic was "slow going, and even devoted fans will wonder whether they're there yet."