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99 Francs

Original title: 99 francs
  • 2007
  • PG-13
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
21K
YOUR RATING
Jean Dujardin in 99 Francs (2007)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:06
1 Video
12 Photos
Dark ComedyComedyDrama

The life of Octave Parango, a flamboyant ad designer, filled with success, satire, misery and love.The life of Octave Parango, a flamboyant ad designer, filled with success, satire, misery and love.The life of Octave Parango, a flamboyant ad designer, filled with success, satire, misery and love.

  • Directors
    • Jan Kounen
    • Laurent Lafran
    • Bruno Vatin
  • Writers
    • Nicolas Charlet
    • Bruno Lavaine
    • Jan Kounen
  • Stars
    • Jean Dujardin
    • Jocelyn Quivrin
    • Patrick Mille
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    21K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Jan Kounen
      • Laurent Lafran
      • Bruno Vatin
    • Writers
      • Nicolas Charlet
      • Bruno Lavaine
      • Jan Kounen
    • Stars
      • Jean Dujardin
      • Jocelyn Quivrin
      • Patrick Mille
    • 24User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:06
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos12

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    Top cast66

    Edit
    Jean Dujardin
    Jean Dujardin
    • Octave Parango
    Jocelyn Quivrin
    Jocelyn Quivrin
    • Charles 'Charlie' Dagout
    Patrick Mille
    Patrick Mille
    • Jean-François 'Jeff' Marolles
    Vahina Giocante
    Vahina Giocante
    • Sophie
    Elisa Tovati
    Elisa Tovati
    • Tamara
    Nicolas Marié
    Nicolas Marié
    • Alfred Duler
    Dominique Bettenfeld
    Dominique Bettenfeld
    • Jean-Christian Gagnant
    Antoine Basler
    • Marc Maronnier
    Fosco Perinti
    • Giovanni Di Toro
    Cendrine Orcier
    • Fabienne
    Dan Herzberg
    Dan Herzberg
    • Steven
    Arsène Mosca
    • Le dealer
    Niels Dubost
    • Père Groobad
    Aurélie Boquien
    • Mère Groobad
    Mathis Jamet
    • Enfant Groobad
    Max Bennett
    Max Bennett
    • Salaud #1
    Diouc Koma
    Diouc Koma
    • Salaud #2
    Joachim Staaf
    • Salaud #3
    • Directors
      • Jan Kounen
      • Laurent Lafran
      • Bruno Vatin
    • Writers
      • Nicolas Charlet
      • Bruno Lavaine
      • Jan Kounen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    7.121.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8franck-25

    Good criticism of the advertising world

    This movie was made like a giant advertising with very rhythmic effects and fast moving pictures. At least, it will keep the eye entertained during the whole movie but there's more in it.

    It describes in a fun way what everybody knows is a sad world. Drugs, sex parties, late work hours, pretentious people, and meetings with stupid people, this is the way it works in the advertising industry.

    It's a very funny criticism of advertising and the way it's made. I feared it would not do justice to Beigbeder's excellent book but in fact it's quite good.

    Most of all, Jean Dujardin is very good in his role. He could be one of those mens you see working at Publicis on the champs Elysees !

    Some people may not like the movie because there is a lot of sex and drug taking inside the movie. Yet, it's a good social depiction of this world. Don't go with the children's (the rating is not very explicit about the real content of the film) and enjoy yourself.
    8mjsinclair

    Excessively good!

    This is a satirical black comedy about the hedonistic excesses of the prima donnas of the advertising world. Octave (Jean Dujardin) is the king of this world, feted and pampered, idolised by his entourage, showered with drugs, women and money, his life is one long over indulgent party, punctuated by the occasional brush with reality.

    He comes down to earth with a bump when his girlfriend announces that she is pregnant, but unable to deal with the consequences of this real life problem, he takes flight into even more excessively decadent diversions. More parties, more drugs, more indolence. However his body inevitably calls "time out" from this constant abuse, and when he is hospitalised with an overdose, he begins to take stock of his life.

    The film is full to bursting, overflowing with creative ideas. The imaginative, highly original and sometimes shocking imagery is rivetingly good. There are psychedelic graphics, animations, dreamlike fantasies, and collages of advertising slogans and magazine clippings all used to great effect.

    Billed as a comedy, there is little humour, and what there is is very dark indeed. Whilst this film excels in raw creativity and inventiveness, it lacks a story. This probably explains why there are two endings, neither of which, in my opinion, works adequately. But it doesn't really matter, as there is so much on offer visually, that I was completely transfixed.

    The name of the yoghurt manufacturer "Madone" is coincidentally similar to another well-known yoghurt "Danone" but also reads in English "Mad One". A tongue in cheek parody of the absurdities of the modern world of advertising which regrettably rings true on many fronts.

    A clever, thoroughly modern film, which even a grumpy old man like me could enjoy!
    9medjai27

    Everything is worse that you thought or how to please an audience

    This movie is in a way better than the book. That does not mean much because it is obviously a subjective remark, but there is a plot you can enjoy, and enough creativity in the montage and the way the film is made to obtain an original "product". Visually it is new, and good. It is all very artistic and graphic, without hindering the scenario. You get to see the beauty of superficiality and the cold hard reality of depression and drug abuse behind excessive behaviors. It is a succession of canvases with an elaborate plot. The acting is just great (Jean Dujardin, Vahina Giocante,...), and you follow the characters into their life introspection without doubting a second of how much real they all are. Paradoxically, you will laugh. The few appearances of the author, F. Beigbeder are, you could think, to remain you of the fact that this film was inspired from a book since you tend to forget that fact and enjoy a new story. There are so much novelty in the narration that you enjoy the film with a new eye, as a new story. If you read the book, you'll find some nice reminder and an inch of novelty to adapt the film to 2007. If you have never heard of the book, you will have a nice display of the secrets of how to sell anything through commercials thanks to the advertising business. You will also get to grasp the meaningless of it all. The film is slightly political, but it does not force your judgment with subliminal messages and ready-made ideas. That way, it's always entertaining. It's sometimes a loud movie, but it's definitely worth the ticket seat. This film is truly original and provides a real cinema experience.
    7moimoichan6

    Pydjhaman rules the world !

    The first question that comes to mind when you ear about this project is : what the hell is Jan Kounen doing as a director of such a movie ? Jan Kounen was a french talented and trendy director of the 90's, just as his friend Matthieu Kassovitz. He released "Doberman" when Kasso brought "La Haine" on french screens. But after this violent/cartoon movie, Jan Kounen had discovered Shamanism while directing his experimental trip out of (the blues) "Blueberry" and then made a documentary about inner journey and other substantial trips. "99 Francs", on the other hand is an auto-fiction by the french intellectual bobo Beigbeider, that narrates his experience as a publicist in a satirical and fashionable style. So, my question was : what's the link between this director and this book and what the hell is Jan Kounen doing as a director of such a movie ?

    First, from a factual point of view, Kounen and the main and incredibly credible actor of the movie, Jean Dujardin, have them-self been publicists, and decided to take the book as a starting point, and to go on completely different directions. Beigbeder, who appears several times in the movie, agreed to this betrayal. But this critic of the advertising world isn't the best part of the movie, and only seems to be a support for more experimental journey that only drugs can give.

    The character of the movie inhales himself several time a gargantuesque quantity of cocaine, unknown pills and other drugs, that makes him have gigantic visions that the movie emphases. A large parts of the movie is just a description of absurd visions, that links the cartoon and trash violence of "Doberman" with the experimental form of "Bluebberry" in the funny and cool package of a critic of advertising and a large public comedy. The best part of "99 Francs" is to me an improbable escape to the tropical forest of "Bluebberry", with Jan 'Pydjhaman' Kounen like guide. If Yan Kounen defines is movie as the "Yogourt Fight Club", the film is also near from Gilliam's more experimental and crazy works.
    kodekon

    Pretentious and full of clichés

    I pretty much hated the movie right from the start. You just know quite fast when you start watching a film, any film, whether the film rings true or whether it's full of sh*t. 99 francs was the latter.

    The film was full of clichés and bad jokes. Probably some of the "funny" stuff was France-centric and don't mean that much to others, but that can't really explain the staggering dumbness I had to witness. I felt like I was treated like a 10 year old who has never seen a film or read a book, or really knows nothing about the realities of the world. Actually it felt like the makers were 15 year old teens who felt like they wanted to set the record straight of what the advertising world reaaalllyyy is like. But the problem is that there was absolutely nothing new here. We've seen this stuff million times before.

    Like other reviewers have pointed out here this was apparently a successful book transformed to film. That explains a lot, because usually it's really hard to achieve the atmosphere successfully. And this film tried really just too much. In a way I appreciate the franticness of the film, and of course I do appreciate the obviously high production values, but to me it was all just a waste. The knowledge of those can't erase the disappointing feeling the film gave me, and that's why I only give it 3 stars.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Each time Octave Parango (played by Jean Dujardin) is in a bad trip, Frédéric Beigbeder appears. It certainly refers to the fact that Beigbeder worked himself in an advertising agency as Octave in the movie.
    • Goofs
      When Octave's version of the Starlight commercial is shown on television for the first time, the blob of yogurt on his eyebrow disappears and reappears between takes. This commercial is cross-clipped from several different takes. The lack of continuity is most certainly intentional.
    • Quotes

      Octave Parango: Everything is bought. Love, Art, planet earth, you me. Especially me. The man is a product like any other, with a limit sell by date. I am advertising, I am one of those that make you dream the things you will ever have. Blue skies, never ugly chicks, perfect happiness and retouched in Photoshop. You think I embellished the world? lost, I screw it up. Everything is temporary. Love, Art, planet Earth, you, me. Especially me

    • Connections
      Featured in Fatal (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      The Fox
      Composed by Lalo Schifrin

      from the film The Fox (1967)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 26, 2007 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Pathé Distribution (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
      • Bambara
      • Swedish
      • Russian
      • Korean
      • Spanish
      • Danish
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • 99 франків
    • Filming locations
      • Château de Ferrières, Ferrières, Seine-et-Marne, France(meeting with Madone executives)
    • Production companies
      • Légende Films
      • Film 99 Francs
      • Pathé
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €12,447,638 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $13,444,973
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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