| Index | 4 reviews in total |
23 out of 27 people found the following review useful:
Step in the restaurant where humor is served hot and cold!, 15 February 2002
Author:
mardosha (mardosha@noise.cz)
As a Funés fan, it's hard for me to pick the best ones, but this would
definitely stand in my top ten! ...or say top fifteen. This time he is the
chef of very exclusive Paris
restaurant.
Choleric as ever, he wants everything to be in the right order or even
better. Problems occur when
president of one unnamed country gets kidnaped while having a dinner at
Septim's. With police
and gangsters behind his back he tries to find the missing head of state by
himself. And obviously
a lot of fun happens during this adventure.
Funés is gorgeous as always, very energetic with funny gesticulation. The
plot is simple, but
cleverly written with many surprising turnovers. And add in the fabulous
scene where DS Citroen
falls into Sienna river, continuing its ride as a boat and you get the
great
entertaining movie of
comedy empire of those times! Step in, tastes fresh and makes you laugh
after all these years:-)
11 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Superb vehicle for a comedic genius, 12 August 2006
Author:
hackapump
I love de Funés too, but I can't claim to have seen all of his movies;
(he made like a hundred, right?) I will say that this one is absolutely
hilarious though.
De Funés plays Septime, the despotic owner of a high class Paris
restaurant, one which entertains the Paris glitterati as well as
ministers of the French government. Once a foreign president disappears
in the middle of Septime's grand number of lighting fire to a fancy
dessert, Septime finds himself in an escalating drama. The police
inspector suspects him, a revolutionary group from the missing
president's country is after him, and the president's entourage blames
him and demands he helps them find the missing head of state. Everyone
is looking for the president, and they all ask of a terrified Septime
to find him.
The poor Septime travels effortlessly (and lightning fast) between the
sheer horror of finding himself in this situation, and the hilarious
fits he throws whenever a staff member of his fails to meet perfection.
The catch phrase of the movie is an angry kissing sound Septime makes
whenever he wants to call an employee's attention to himself, without
disturbing the guests, and it never gets tired.
I once heard a rumour that de Funés in person was exactly like the
high-strung choleric characters he played, and thusly passed away too
soon in a heart attack. I have no idea if this is true, but you do get
the sense that he is more or less playing himself, which makes for some
very convincing comedy. The man was a comedic genius, and this movie is
a superb vehicle for him.
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
The moment « El Presidente » vanishes, the story too ! (DVD), 7 October 2009
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Author:
yave from PariS
A cult comedy is from my point of view, a movie in which you can't
remember all the funny moments and therefore, you are always happy to
discover them again and again.
So, there, I knew that De Funes was a terrible, tyrannic boss of a
great restaurant but his manners eluded me while they are really funny!
He's truly the best actor in this field and beyond, a very talented
one. As Al (Pacino), I feel that De Funes exudes humanity, compassion
and class behind all his jokes
In addition, as it figures among the oldest movies I saw, it was great
to see Paris an half-century ago. Besides cars and trends, I feel that
Paris was more "green" with trees than actually.
Unfortunately, when the main thing is served, the script becomes
strange: a mix between Bond for the aquatic car and the Pink Panther
for the winter sequence
We are far away of the restaurant!
In conclusion, great appetizers but the menu left me wanting for more!
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Funès' action role, in what looks like a Hitchcock spoof --fancy, endearing extravaganza, 11 August 2009
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Author:
Cristi_Ciopron from CGSM, Soseaua Nationala 49
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
LE GRAND RESTAURANT has two partsthe life in a grand restaurant, with
some gentle satire about a classy Parisian restaurant patron and his
rather undisciplined people, and a thriller spoof, with nice action
sequencessome kind of a funny Hitchcock spoofabout the mysterious
disappearance of a Hispanic president from the Parisian restaurant.
There is a beautiful shot of SaintCloud park. The anthem of the
Hispanic country is cool. As with other similar Funès flicks, the pace
looks pretty incoherent and lazy, with the rather static long intro of
restaurant life, but after-wards it mightily gains strength and takes
off in the 2nd part, the Hitchcock spoof (--daddy Funès would beand
with what briothe imperiled Hitchcockian innocent, the vanishing of
the Hispanic leader is conclusive, Funès has a sexy babe as a sidekick,
there are conspirators, snowy landscapes, the conventional suspense--).
LE GRAND RESTAURANT might belong to a top 10 Funès flicks, of course
below LA GRANDE VADROUILLE, RABBI JACOB, LES GRANDES VACANCES, LE
CORNIAUD, LA ZIZANIE, LA SOUPE AUX CHOUX, LA TRAVERSÉE DE Paris, LE
PETIT BAIGNEUR, SUR UN ARBRE PERCHÉ, TAXI, ROULOTTE ET CORRIDAwhich
would make LGR an 11th entry, and I didn't include the FANTÔMAS
franchise (--already amply reviewed on this very site--) and AH! LES
BELLES BACCHANTESarguably not primarily Funès movies.
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