France proved too strong for the Netherlands in Paris on Wednesday as first-half goals from Karim Benzema and Blaise Matuidi sealed a 2-0 friendly win.
Benzema volleyed home the opener just after the half-hour mark and Matuidi added another three minutes before the interval, and the visitors never really looked like coming back into the game as they slumped to their first defeat in 19 matches.
While they appear to have work to do before the World Cup, France picked up where they left off in beating Ukraine 3-0 in dramatic fashion to qualify for the finals in Brazil in November's play-off.
Benzema appears to be an entirely different player from the man who endured an international goal drought of more than 1,200 minutes until the northern autumn of 2013.
He was unlucky to see an effort from point-blank range blocked on the line at the end of a flowing move involving Mathieu Valbuena and Antoine Griezmann and then had the ball in the net, only for a tight offside call from the English assistant referee to cut short his celebrations.
The visitors replied with a Robin van Persie volley that was beaten away by Hugo Lloris in the France goal following a Wesley Sneijder corner, but the hosts went on to break the deadlock in the 32nd minute.
There have been concerns about the fragility of Netherlands coach Louis van Gaal's Dutch defence, and France frequently sought to catch them out with balls over the top.
That tactic paid off when Matuidi's lofted pass forward took Daley Blind out of the game and the ball bounced perfectly for Benzema, who lashed an emphatic right-footed volley past the despairing dive of Jasper Cillessen and into the net for his 19th international goal.
The second goal arrived three minutes before the break, and Benzema was involved again, his pass releasing Valbuena on the right before the Marseille playmaker crossed to the back post for Matuidi, whose acrobatic finish gave Cillessen no chance and saw him break his international goalscoring duck.
Eliaquim Mangala then missed a great chance to make it 3-0 just before the interval, failing to convert a Benzema cutback from practically on the line with the Dutch defence increasingly looking in disarray, but the visitors survived until half-time.
However, they never really threatened in a second half lacking in rhythm but which was at least livened up by the introduction of Ribery, who forced one save from Cillessen after replacing Valbuena on 63 minutes.
Raphael Varane headed over when unmarked eight yards out following a corner kick, but France eased to their first win against the Netherlands since 1997.