| Index | 4 reviews in total |
Burying the foreskin, 10 September 2009
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Author:
jotix100 from New York
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Certain religious rituals are too weird for persons alien to them. Such
is the case of this story in which an infant is born. The parents being
Jewish must have the baby boy circumcised, something akin to perhaps
being baptized, in another religion. Jonas, an eager young musician,
must do the deed. For that purpose, he wraps the part that has been cut
from the baby's penis to be buried. This involves an all night
adventure through Parisian streets at a speed of lightning because the
rite is to be completed before midnight.
Dante Desarthe directed this comedy is not the disaster some of the
comments submitted to this forum make out to be. We must confess our
sole interest in the film was the fact that Emmanuelle Devos, one of
France's most amazing actresses had a part in the movie. Alas, she has
only a small role. Clement Sibony and Rona Hartner try to liven up
things.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Don't waste your time, 26 June 2007
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Author:
groggo from Toronto, Ontario, Canada
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This irritating little one-trick pony of a film tries to pretend it's
feature-length material, and even with ample padding it still falls
flat.
I like French films (and European films in general), but this reminds
me of the same schlock Adam Sandler, Jack Black, or (fill in your
favourite Hollywood madcap here) could have stitched together in two
weeks. Being wacky for the sake of being wacky, with no real substance
or context (to say nothing of freshness) to bolster it, is not a
formula for a winning flick. Similar kinds of nonsense comes out of
LaLaLand every week -- sure-fire bankable stuff that's ultimately a sad
waste of time, money and talent.
The lovely Emmanuelle Devos is wasted in this movie, which is concerned
with a 23-year-old Jewish father who must bury his newborn son's
foreskin within three days, which I guess is grounded in Jewish law. Or
something. And don't you know, he faces all kinds of problems burying
that severed head, so to speak.
Based on this flimsy thread of a sitcom plot, we're taken on an often
boring ride for 1 1/2 hours, with twists so predictable that I was
fast-forwarding. There's a silly subplot involving a man who feels he's
been insulted so he sends three of his henchmen out to seek
satisfaction. They, of course, do the Keystone Kops routine: you know,
goofy guys who just can't do anything right.
Maybe you have to be Jewish to 'enjoy' this sprawl. I still have my
foreskin, so perhaps I'm not sensitive enough.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Marie Desgranges in a Jewish family., 10 June 2001
Author:
lionel.willoquet (lionel.willoquet@wanadoo.fr) from Nevers, France
A young father, charged with burying the foreskin of his freshly circumcised
son, as well as introducing him to the Jewish tradition, lives out many
events not listed in Torah.
A fanciful and soft comedy. This track race is rather oiled well.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Amiable comedy, including uniquely grotesque situations, 5 November 2000
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Author:
m_mckechneay from Austria
A young father has to bury his baby-sons foreskin after circumcision, as
tradition demands. On his strange mission a lot of trouble awaits him.
Lots of reflected irony concerning Jewry, brought forward in a kindhearted
tone.
The gangster-chase-subplot is unneccessary.
But all in all a recommendation!
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