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Les 11 commandements

  • 2004
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Vincent Desagnat, Michaël Youn, and Benjamin Morgaine in Les 11 commandements (2004)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:46
1 Video
5 Photos
Comedy

Michaël, Vincent, Benjamin and their friends meet the God of Jokes who explains to them that the inhabitants laugh less and less. He then entrusts them the mission to perform 11 commands.Michaël, Vincent, Benjamin and their friends meet the God of Jokes who explains to them that the inhabitants laugh less and less. He then entrusts them the mission to perform 11 commands.Michaël, Vincent, Benjamin and their friends meet the God of Jokes who explains to them that the inhabitants laugh less and less. He then entrusts them the mission to perform 11 commands.

  • Directors
    • François Desagnat
    • Thomas Sorriaux
    • Steven Ada
  • Writers
    • Vincent Desagnat
    • Dominique Gauriaud
    • Romain Lévy
  • Stars
    • Michaël Youn
    • Vincent Desagnat
    • Benjamin Morgaine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • François Desagnat
      • Thomas Sorriaux
      • Steven Ada
    • Writers
      • Vincent Desagnat
      • Dominique Gauriaud
      • Romain Lévy
    • Stars
      • Michaël Youn
      • Vincent Desagnat
      • Benjamin Morgaine
    • 8User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:46
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos4

    View Poster
    View Poster
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    View Poster

    Top cast18

    Edit
    Michaël Youn
    Michaël Youn
    • Mike
    Vincent Desagnat
    Vincent Desagnat
    • Vincent
    Benjamin Morgaine
    • Ben
    William Geslin
    • Willy
    Tefa
    • Tefa
    • (as Tefa Bonnefoi)
    Dieudonné
    Dieudonné
    • Le dieu de la blague
    Gad Elmaleh
    Gad Elmaleh
    • Gad
    Jurij Prette
    • Yuri
    Jean-Christophe Campan
    • L'arbitre
    Patrick Timsit
    • Toto…
    Djibril Cissé
    Djibril Cissé
    • Self
    Juliette Arnaud
    • Juliette
    Amélie Mauresmo
    • Self
    Francia Seguy
    • Le chauffeur du dieu de la blague
    Virginie Toc
    • La prof de danse
    • (as Virginie Tocque)
    Laurent Cotillard
    Laurent Cotillard
    • Le rabbin en trottinette
    Carla Collado
    • Girl in the limousine
    Delphine de Turckheim
    • Directors
      • François Desagnat
      • Thomas Sorriaux
      • Steven Ada
    • Writers
      • Vincent Desagnat
      • Dominique Gauriaud
      • Romain Lévy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    4.72.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8bmbzn

    Funny if you like this genre of comedy

    First of all what everyone must understand is that basically it can't be as well appreciated by someone who does not understand french. The hardest thing to translate is humour. I learned this the hard way... what's funny in french often doesn't even translate into English and vice versa.

    I enjoyed this film. Not all the sketches were exceptional but some moments had me in hysterics. I did see Jackass and I didn't like it as much. If you have seen other things with Michael Youn and his two buddies you will understand why they're so popular in France, they are actually quite hilarious. Although I think I can live on without seeing Michael Youn yelling MORNING LIVE naked through the streets of Paris for the 100th time. (FYI NO THAT WAS NOT A SPOILER FROM THE MOVIE ITS FROM HIS SHOW MORNING LIVE which is no longer airing)

    Obviously if you do not like this genre of film, don't watch it, plain and simple. You will not like it... I REPEAT you will not like it.
    9haha_u_smell

    Wicked pie

    Frankly I thought it was an awesome movie. It was extremely similar to jackass, except for a few differences that made it better. First of all it was well french and second of all it was like three times funny.

    I watched Jackass one and two.... they were funny I laughed and enjoyed them very much, but in this movie I just couldn't help myself I was in hysterics the whole time. It had a better concept. An actual story line. Jackass was a bunch of stupid stuff crammed together, although enjoyable I would hardly call it a movie. Less 11 commandments had a general story line. It tied all they're stupid stuff together to make an enjoyable film.

    Another difference is that in this movie there was more comedy. It wasn't just guys hurting themselves and doing vulgar competitions it was comedy and pranks. It was more fun less grotesque competition to out disgust one another.

    So if a bunch of random guys being complete tools is your kind of humor then you'll love it, but if your too 'mature' for that kind of comedy... well then obviously it won't appeal to you. It's logic man.
    abisio

    Jackass soufflé ?

    When I noticed that `11 Commandments', was a huge success in France, more than bigger productions as `Les Rivieres Pourples 2' or ' Blueberry', I was really surprised.

    I came to know Michael Youn in `LA BEUZE', a very strange and irregular film, somewhat funny but not superb or worth to recommend. Out of curiosity, I bought the French Special Edition DVD with the theatrical plus the uncensored version not shown in theatres.

    To my surprise, after a simple start premise (GOD order a group of friends to do absurd things and make the world a funnier place), this group of people start doing the most stupid things you could imagine. Working like a hidden camera, but never showing peoples face, the movie becomes a chronicle of a bunch of stupid acts, not particularly interesting but some of them quite gross (the uncensored version goes a little further but nothing to get excited about).

    Is the movie funny? In my humble opinion ABSOLUTELY NOT.

    I did not see JACKASS THE MOVIE, but I believe it must be something alike (and JACKASS was a success in USA). It is a bunch of people damaging themselves (and sometimes others). It is like seeing a bunch of kids playing with everything forbidden (without parents controlling them), it could seems something liberating, and sometimes innocent bystanders reactions are really fun to watch, but in this case, is just child's play. It is as if somebody paid this people to break things. It should be a joy for them; but watching them do it have not meaning to me.

    You probably have a lot better things to do than watch this movie.
    6ElMaruecan82

    Yes, it's the "French Jackass" but so what?

    Naturally, Michaël Youn didn't invent the concept, that belonged to the "Jackass" series but those were the "Big Brother" and reality TV days and in a time where every successful idea was duplicated in every country in the world, no one should cast a stone at Youn and his team for lack of originality. And Youn didn't wait for "Jackass" to be exported in France to become a troublemaking icon, a TV cuckoo to wake up all the early birds from 2000 to 2002. Long before the Youtube days, Youn was the host of a TV show called "Morning Live", a show where no holds were barred and where he and his friends and sidekicks Vincent Desagnat and Benjamin Morgaine did basically anything for the sake of laughs, from the cheapest gags to the most elaborate.

    What's left from this show besides that it launched his career is a daily stunt with a megaphone, using various places such as a lavatory, a car shop and even his girlfriend's bedroom to deliver a loud "Morning Live, from 7 to 9, the show that awakens your neighbors!" he made a spectacular entrance in France by delivering on a breakfast plate a bit of silliness, much needed in these post September 11 days. There was a guy back then named Remi Gaillard who was as good if not better (as in more sophisticated) as Youn but Gaillard didn't have Youtube to back him up, not yet. Youn could still count on TV and earned enough notoriety and money to a successful film in 2003 called "La Beuze".

    Cancelling his idea of a sequel because of the political context, he figured he could use a budget to adapt the Jackass concept and there came "The 11 Commandments", a film so old that the now blacklisted and controversial Dieudonné stars there as the God of Prank. The film is simple: playing their real selves, Youn, Desagnat, Morgaine and a few newcomers must accomplish tasks à la Hercule and the film follows an episodic storyline punctuated with more or less inspired interludes. One of them includes a race with the guys disguised as phallic organs, Desagnat being the tallest one has naturally the black-colored one, the rest includes random quickies, sketches and song parodies.

    Random is the word, the film's merit is that within the chaotic assemblage, there are moments that confine to genius and some that fall flat, maybe that's the essence of Youn's humor, he takes risk, and even when you don't laugh, there's still room for admiration. I wasn't sure I laughed at the bit where foot and tennis balls were thrown at them (cameos from Djibril Cissé and Amelie Mauresmo), I'm not sure I laughed at the way they turned a whole house into a living swimming pool or the part in the supermarket where they started playing with floor and ketchup though the sight of security officer slipping made me laugh hard. So I guess it's not much the stunt that works than its punchline, it's fun to see the serious man slipping because he didn't want to and he's the guy making his job.

    It's the banana peel principle I guess. There's another moment where a simple pizza delivery brings dozens of people to the house, turning an extra menu into a whole improvised party inside some guy's room, I didn't laugh a bit, not until everyone left the house and the fat deliveryman stayed and asked the customer if he needed any hot sauce, that was pure genius and made the part all worth it. For a film that makes a comment about the way to make people laugh (the God parts are quite inspired), it's only justice that I get analytical. So, the result is uneven for one restaurant task where they turn until losing their balance to throw food all over the place (not funny), another one consists of playing " Cotton Eye Joe" in a library (funny), for a moment where they put on blue pills to show their endowments in a beach (funny), you have the pepper moment (not so funny). The arrest contest is braver than funny but it provides an interesting insight on the stuff that challenges the cops' patience and what doesn't.

    But my favorite moment is still the one where they all sing "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" in front of a Lyon audience (the pun is obvious) and saying they come from Saint-Etienne (which would be like saying you're a Barcelonan band in Bernabeu), that moment isn't hilarious but it's smart and well-thought, and makes the experience worthwhile. Of course, the whole film is a joke but I admire the way even they lost control, leading to that strange escalation during the endings credits sequence as if the project went beyond their heads. "The 11 Commandments" is like nothing else in French cinema, it's juvenile, childish, prankish, crass but there's smartness lying underneath and signs that maybe Youn does "Jackass" but secretly admire "Monty Python" (the animation is clearly an ode to Terry Gilliam's style).

    Now, if you easily cringe at the sight of people going for troubles with the cops, indulging to distasteful pranks, wasting food, this movie might not be for you, and you might spend most of the time filled with unease and disgust. But then again, if you're that kind of person, the film might offer you a new and twisted area of perception, here is a bunch of crazy grown-ups with the maturity of high-school teenagers doing the kind of stuff you'd never dare to even think about it... and isn't it the essence of movies to show you stuff you wouldn't see anywhere else? Or wouldn't do?
    1nicholas.rhodes

    And this is supposed to be cinema ................

    I hired this from the video club at work and am already regretting the 1.5 euros wasted on this enterprise. The film is a non-starter, totally uninteresting and not funny at all. To laugh in front of this one, you'd need to import several cylinders of laughing gas, and high-quality laughing gas at that. Under the pretext of making the world a funnier place, we are treated to a group of men supposedly playing jokes on other people - unfortunately there is no humour at all and if this is what humorous cinema has been reduced to in the year 2004, the world is indeed in a sorry, sorry state. This film brought to mind another American series, just as humorless and just as pointless, called "Jackass" featuring a load of pathetic masochistic idiots showing off in front of the camera.

    I don't like to be 100% negative about any film but quite frankly this one, as well as its DVD, would be better off melted down into plastic for dustbins on council estates !

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Crazy credits
      During the closing credits outtakes from a prank war between Michaël Youn and William Geslin are shown
    • Connections
      References 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Sexy boy
      Produced by William Geslin and Dominique Gauriaud

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 4, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The 11 Commandments
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • SAJ
      • M6 Films
      • Neon Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $20,537,839
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby

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