Le Gendarme et les Gendarmettes (lit.'The Gendarme and the Gendarmettes'), also known in English as Never Play Clever Again or The Troops & Troop-ettes,[3] is a 1982 French comedy film, and the sixth and last movie of the Gendarme series . It is the final film of the director Jean Girault and the lead actor Louis de Funès, both of which were involved in the franchise since its very first film in 1964.

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Le Gendarme et les Gendarmettes
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Directed byJean Girault
Tony Aboyantz
Written byRichard Balducci
Jean Girault
Jacques Vilfrid
Produced byGérard Beytout
StarringLouis de Funès
Michel Galabru
Claude Gensac
Maurice Risch
Music byRaymond Lefèvre
Distributed bySNC
Release date
  • 6 October 1982 (1982-10-06) (France)[1]
Running time
95 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Box office$31.6 million [2]
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Synopsis

Four young beautiful female police officers come to learn from the "masters" but it turns out they are coping much better with the problem than their teachers. But things heat up when the "gendarmettes" are kidnapped one by one.

Auto stunt scene

Reminiscent of the motorcycle stunt driving scene in the 1968 installment Le gendarme se marie, France Rumilly featured again as the stunt driving nun, "Soeur Clotilde", this time in a spectacular and comedic scene, driving a Citroën 2CV, a year after James Bond drove a 2CV in For Your Eyes Only, but including the gag whereby the car breaks up in two pieces, and the driver continues driving the front-wheel drive front half of the car, three years before this gag is repeated by James Bond in a Renault 11, in the 1985 film A View to a Kill.

References

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