To keep his job, a music producer forms a band with a priest, a depressed rabbi and a fake imam.
Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Ramzy Bedia | ... | Moncef | |
Fabrice Eboué | ... | Nicolas Lejeune | |
Guillaume de Tonquédec | ... | Benoît | |
Audrey Lamy | ... | Sabrina | |
Jonathan Cohen | ... | Samuel | |
Mathilde Seigner | ... | Sophie Demanche | |
Amelle Chahbi | ... | Alexia Lejeune | |
Bérénice Achille | ... | Lou Lejeune | |
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Vincent Solignac | ... | Directeur lingerie |
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David Bosteli | ... | Directeur cosmétiques |
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Emilie Vidal Subias | ... | Catherine |
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Farid Omri | ... | Imam 1 |
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Mohamed Bounouara | ... | Imam 2 |
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Franck Migeon | ... | Imam 3 |
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Tassadit Mandi | ... | La mère de Moncef |
To keep his job, a music producer forms a band with a priest, a depressed rabbi and a fake imam.
With Fabrice Eboué belonging to the "Jamel Comedy Show" generation, I expected a funny movie, with some politically un-correct and daring. Alas, everything stays conventional, as if it was calibrated for prime time tv on a conservative channel - by a 50-ish director. We already have the generation born in the 1950's doing such movies after having their blast (at least a good part of Splendid, les Inconnus for example have past their blast and specialized in such comedy aimed for the France-centric), we do not need younger humorist to directly take that direction.
I don't know if he was restrained by its producers, but I failed to find real funny moments, not to say an original story past the pitch (yes, with only the pitch, it could have been something). I did not find anything to salvage except the intention behind the movie which raise its rating to an already generous 3/10.