Le Dîner de Cons (film)

Le Dîner de Cons

Film Poster
Directed by Francis Veber
Produced by Alain Poiré
Written by Francis Veber
Starring
Cinematography Luciano Tovoli
Editing by Georges Klotz
Distributed by Gaumont
Release date(s) 15 April 1998 (1998-04-15)
Running time 87 minutes
Country France
Language French
Box office 78,599,508 ₣

Le Dîner de Cons (English: "Dinner for Cretins")[1], marketed as The Dinner Game in the USA, is a 1998 French comedy film written and directed by Francis Veber. It is a cinema adaptation by Veber of his play Le Dîner de Cons.

Contents

Cast

Story

Pierre Brochant, a Parisian publisher, attends a weekly "idiots' dinner", where guests, who are prominent Parisian businessmen, must bring along an "idiot" who the other guests can ridicule. At the end of the dinner, the evening's champion idiot is selected.

With the help of an "idiot scout", Brochant manages to find a "gem", François Pignon, a Finance Ministry employee whose passion is building replicas of landmarks with matchsticks. When Brochant starts to suffer from a bad back, his wife, Christine, leaves him shortly before Pignon arrives at his apartment, as she realizes that he still wants to go to the "idiots' dinner". Brochant initially wants Pignon to leave, but instead becomes reliant on him, because of his back problem and his need to resolve his relationship problems.

He solicits Pignon's assistance in making a series of telephone calls to locate his wife, but Pignon gaffes each time, including revealing the existence of Brochant's mistress, Marlene Sasseur, to his wife Christine and inviting Lucien Cheval, a tax inspector, to Brochant's house where, in an attempt to disguise his tax evasion, Brochant is forced to quickly hide most of his valuables.

In the meantime, Brochant is able to make amends with an old friend, Juste LeBlanc, from whom he stole Christine, and through the evening's events is forced to reassess his mistakes.

Awards

At the 1999 César Awards, the film was honored with six nominations of which it won three. The categories where it won were Best Actor for Jacques Villeret,[2] Best Supporting Actor for Daniel Prévost and Best Screenplay for Francis Veber. It was nominated but did not win for Best Film, Veber as Best Director and Catherine Frot as Best Supporting Actress.

Other adaptations

References

  1. ^ The last word is difficult to translate directly into English, as the equivalent English word, "cunt", is considered unacceptably vulgar: see Bradshaw, Peter (2 July 1999). "Con trick". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/1999/jul/02/4. Retrieved 23 January 2011. . "Asshole" is the best equivalent.
  2. ^ Tomasovitch, Geoffroy (16 February 2007). "Mystères autour de l'héritage de Jacques Villeret". leparisien.fr. http://www.leparisien.fr/faits-divers/mysteres-autour-de-l-heritage-de-jacques-villeret-16-02-2007-2007774088.php. Retrieved 23 January 2011. 
  3. ^ ""Le Dîner de Cons" (The Dinner Game)". Dashan Online. http://www.dashan.com.cn/en/projects/dinner.htm. Retrieved 4 August 2010. 

External links