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IMDbPro

Le dîner de cons

Titre original : Dinner for Schmucks
  • 2010
  • 14A
  • 1h 54m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,9/10
114 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 558
1 320
Steve Carell and Paul Rudd in Le dîner de cons (2010)
Tim (Rudd) is a rising executive who "succeeds" in finding the perfect guest, IRS employee Barry (Carell), for his boss's monthly event, a so-called "dinner for idiots," which offers certain advantages to the exec who shows up with the biggest buffoon.
Liretrailer1 min 50 s
21 vidéos
99+ photos
Dark ComedyComedy

Lorsqu'il découvre que ses supérieurs organisent un dîner célébrant l'idiotie de leurs invités, un cadre prometteur s'interroge à ce sujet lorsqu'il est invité. Au même moment, il se lie d'a... Tout lireLorsqu'il découvre que ses supérieurs organisent un dîner célébrant l'idiotie de leurs invités, un cadre prometteur s'interroge à ce sujet lorsqu'il est invité. Au même moment, il se lie d'amitié avec un homme qui serait l'invité parfait.Lorsqu'il découvre que ses supérieurs organisent un dîner célébrant l'idiotie de leurs invités, un cadre prometteur s'interroge à ce sujet lorsqu'il est invité. Au même moment, il se lie d'amitié avec un homme qui serait l'invité parfait.

  • Director
    • Jay Roach
  • Writers
    • David Guion
    • Michael Handelman
    • Francis Veber
  • Stars
    • Steve Carell
    • Paul Rudd
    • Stephanie Szostak
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    5,9/10
    114 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 558
    1 320
    • Director
      • Jay Roach
    • Writers
      • David Guion
      • Michael Handelman
      • Francis Veber
    • Stars
      • Steve Carell
      • Paul Rudd
      • Stephanie Szostak
    • 366Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 192Commentaires de critiques
    • 56Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos21

    Dinner for Schmucks: Trailer #2
    Trailer 1:50
    Dinner for Schmucks: Trailer #2
    Dinner for Schmucks
    Trailer 2:31
    Dinner for Schmucks
    Dinner for Schmucks
    Trailer 2:31
    Dinner for Schmucks
    Dinner for Schmucks: "Don't Think About It"
    Clip 0:29
    Dinner for Schmucks: "Don't Think About It"
    Dinner for Schmucks: "How Much"
    Clip 0:59
    Dinner for Schmucks: "How Much"
    "Back Brace" from Dinner for Schmucks
    Clip 0:53
    "Back Brace" from Dinner for Schmucks
    Dinner for Schmucks: "Shipping & Handling"
    Clip 0:46
    Dinner for Schmucks: "Shipping & Handling"

    Photos146

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    Voir l’affiche
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    Rôles principaux41

    Modifier
    Steve Carell
    Steve Carell
    • Barry
    Paul Rudd
    Paul Rudd
    • Tim
    Stephanie Szostak
    Stephanie Szostak
    • Julie
    Zach Galifianakis
    Zach Galifianakis
    • Therman
    Jemaine Clement
    Jemaine Clement
    • Kieran
    Lucy Punch
    Lucy Punch
    • Darla
    Bruce Greenwood
    Bruce Greenwood
    • Lance Fender
    David Walliams
    David Walliams
    • Müeller
    Ron Livingston
    Ron Livingston
    • Caldwell
    Larry Wilmore
    Larry Wilmore
    • Williams
    Kristen Schaal
    Kristen Schaal
    • Susana
    P.J. Byrne
    P.J. Byrne
    • Davenport
    Andrea Savage
    Andrea Savage
    • Robin
    Nick Kroll
    Nick Kroll
    • Josh
    Randall Park
    Randall Park
    • Henderson
    Lucy Davenport
    Lucy Davenport
    • Birgit
    Chris O'Dowd
    Chris O'Dowd
    • Marco - Blind Swordsman
    • (as Christopher O'Dowd)
    Jeff Dunham
    Jeff Dunham
    • Lewis the Ventriloquist
    • Director
      • Jay Roach
    • Writers
      • David Guion
      • Michael Handelman
      • Francis Veber
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs366

    5,9113.9K
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    Avis en vedette

    7franciscoraposo72

    Unfortunately Very Underrated!

    Let me cut the chase, I do know which movie I'm reviewing, I do give Dinner for Schmucks a 10 out of 10 and I do consider it my 6th favorite movie, let me tell you why. Dinner for Schmucks it's not only a clever, well-acted and hilarious comedy, it's comedy with lots of heart and although it's a bit stupid it's definitely my 6th favorite movie. Jay Roach (The Fockers) did a terrific job with everything. Steve Carell, well, I'll have to write about him on a single paragraph, cause he was just... Paul Rudd was great, he played mature and funny. Zach Galifianakis, well, I'll join him to Steve's paragraph. Sow, Dinner for Schmucks is a terrific movie, it's not for everybody but it is for me, it's a light-hearted hilarious and stupid comedy that I just have re-watched thousands of times and I can't seem to get tired of. The soundtrack by Theodore Shapiro was excellent and gave this movie a certain atmosphere that I just loved 100%, the song "Fool on the Hill" (The Beatles) right at the beginning is genius and along the movie goes on you find many appealing themes and then at the credits you here an amazing song from Theodore, overall, I loved the soundtrack. STORY: Tim (Paul Rudd) has a great job and a great girlfriend and they're both in a great place at life. Tim is about to get a new office and an awesome promotion, but first, he'll have to appear at his boss' dinner that he hosts once a month, that dinner consists on every worker bringing an idiot person and the most idiot person of the dinner will win. Tim was definitely not going, but later, he has second thoughts when he accidentally runs over Barry (Steve Carell), a harmless guy who's work is at IRS and who's hobby is to make sets and pictures with dead mice. MY OPINION: The plot was amazing, it was full of hilarious stuff and fun stuff, I loved it.

    Steve Carell was purely fantastic, his glasses, his teeth and his blonde hair, he was just fantastic and he stole me a bit of oxygen if you know what I mean, Steve was extremely hilarious and no one could play his role better than he did, he was funny and idiot but he played a sweet guy that we all wish to meet, he was unforgettable. Zach Galifianakis was truly genius, his orange ... (I think it's worth being seen without knowing) and his hilarious laugh makes his performance be unique and highly unforgettable. The chemistry between Steve and Zach was fantastic and the scene where they both imaginary fight is a movie classic.

    Overall, Dinner for Schmucks is my 6th favorite movie without any doubts, it's funny, heart warming, very well-acted, hilarious, entertaining, fun, very well directed, very well written and still, I don't know how is it so much underrated- Highly recommended. Unforgettable comedy. 6th Best Movie of All Time.
    MLDinTN

    When Steve Carell plays an idiot...

    you know there's a good chance it's going to be funny. Also Paul Rudd was good too. Rudd plays Tim, a businessman up for a promotion. His boss invites him to a dinner party in which guests bring someone with a special talent that makes them look stupid. The idea is to make fun of them. Reluctantly, Tim agrees to do it even with his disapproving girlfriend, Julie. He literally runs into Barry, played by Carell and Tim soon realizes Barry would be just the one to invite to this dinner. His talent is stuffing dead mice and creating scenes with them.

    Problem is Barry shows up the day before the dinner party and Tim just can't get rid of him. Barry creates all these hilarious problems with Julie and inviting over Tim's stalker, Darla. The funniest scene is when Tim meets the swiss couple at the restaurant and Barry shows up to solve the problem of a missing Julie by bringing Darla. That had me LOL. Next funniest part was the mind control by Zack G. over Barry and his wife and the pudding. There's too many funny things to list them all.

    FINAL VERDICT: By far this was the funniest comedy I've seen in quite a long time. I highly recommend it.
    7Jonathon_Natsis

    More like Breakfast of Champions!

    An Americanised remake of the French comedy Le Diner De Cons (1998), Dinner For Schmucks puts together an admirable cast of comics, including Paul Rudd, Steve Carell, Jemaine Clement (of Flight Of The Concords fame) and Zach Galifianakis. I understand that his star is growing rapidly, but his name is just too hard to type, so for the rest of this article he will be 'Fat Jesus.' Nonetheless, this film delivers laughs and emotion in satisfying doses, and something I would definitely recommend.

    Paul Rudd plays Tim, who works a nothing job in Generic Financial Firm #17, until his superiors offer him the chance at a promotion. The catch? He must impress at a dinner hosted by his boss, at which all employees must bring along the most idiotic guest they can find in the hope of taking out first prize. Enter Steve Carell's Barry, IRS employee and amateur taxidermist, whose unique 'skill' with turning dead mice into works of art makes him the perfect candidate. Also circling the plot is Tim's diminishing relationship with girlfriend Julie, who no longer has feelings for the corporate drone Tim has become.

    The acting is competent overall, but two performances stand out and really give this film a kick. Clement seems to take great pride in his character: a pretentious artist whose hobbies include tantric sex and living amongst goats. In fact, his character is reminiscent of Russell Brand as Aldous Snow (Forgetting Sarah Marshall and Get Him To The Greek), but Clement comes right out of left field with excellent line delivery and tone, coupled with some fantastic physical comedy.

    Paul Rudd may receive top billing, but make no mistake…Steve Carell drives this film. Just about every line that comes out of Barry's mouth is gold, and a testament to the effort put into the screenplay. But it is the dimension, as opposed to just the humour, of Barry's character that makes him so engaging. He invokes real sympathy in a couple of emotional scenes that prove him to be much more than just a 'schmuck.' And his absurdist chemistry with Fat Jesus during the climactic scene is nothing short of hilarious.

    As soppy as it sounds, the film drives home a nice moral about how all people, regardless of hobby or intellect, all crave the same feelings of friendship and compassion in their lives. One scene in which Barry effectively questions all that he has achieved in his life is particularly heart wrenching and although it sets the foundation for an admittedly cliché ending, it is pleasing to see a film that markets itself as a first-string comedy still putting emphasis on genuine affection and character.

    When using a number system to rate films for as long as I have, one begins to develop a conscious idea about what number represents certain films. In my book, anything ranked at eight or above typically constitutes either a classic, or a film I think will be looked upon as a classic in the next twenty years. Dinner For Schmucks dosen't rank quite so high, but it puts up a great fight.

    *There's nothing I love more than a bit of feedback, good or bad. So drop me a line on jnatsis@iprimus.com.au and let me know what you thought of my review.*
    6jgregg42

    "Dinner for Schmucks" Only Whets the Appetite.

    "Dinner for Schmucks" has a clever title but it needed to spend more time on the main course. The audience is subjugated to almost one and a half hours of build up time before the dinner bell rings. It's not time wasted though, the story does make good use of its two hour run time. However, I felt like I was on a plane taxiing down the runway trying to get up enough speed to take off and once in flight the plane kept dipping and then pulling back up; then it finally it made an abrupt landing and the flight was over.

    We are first introduced to Tim (played by Paul Rudd), an investment analyst, who is presented an opportunity to pounce on a new promotion at work. The story is set up as most business tales are told. The boss has an important client, the main character is presented with a once in a life time opportunity to prove his worth and so on and so forth. While in the process he learns something about himself.

    The business men (one of whom is played by Ron Livingston from "Office Space" fame) are the typical jerks who will do anything to keep on top of the dog pile. In this particular dog pile they also like to pick on the smaller, weaker dogs. It just so happens that the big dogs are having their "dinner for winners" in a few days. Tim now has a great chance to prove to his boss he will go to any length to earn the new position. The catch is that he has to find a loser to bring to dinner. They then have a contest, unbeknown to the losers, to see who the biggest schmuck is.

    Tim finds his loser immediately the next day not by chance but because as Tim so wisely says "everything happens for a reason". Welcome aboard, Barry (played by Steve Carell), here the story starts picking up a little steam. Barry has a unique talent of finding the positive in almost any situation, he mispronounces words that any 5th grader knows, works for the IRS and in his spare time works on his "Mouseterpieces". A perfect fit for Tim. A "Mouseterpiece" is Barry's taxidermy side projects where he takes dead mice and mounts them in familiar historical and everyday scenarios (i.e. The Last Supper, mice having a picnic, Whistler's Mother, etc).

    A lot of activity happens in that single night before the big dinner; Tim and Barry break into one of Tim's girlfriend's biggest clients' homes and finds him in a weird sexual perversion act. Next Barry accidentally invites Tim's ex-fling, Darla, over to the apartment and the first laugh riot is finally given to the audiences through a funny fight scene between Barry and Darla. Then it is on to the IRS to talk to Barry's boss, Therman (played by Zach Galifianakis), who is also a self proclaimed mind reader. Have you noticed they still haven't made it to the dinner yet? The next day Tim has a brunch appointment with a potential multi million dollar client where Barry and Darla show up trying to smooth things over. Again the straight man, Tim, and goofy man, Barry, routine starts up and we are given another good laugh. It was a pretty easy set up; take a high pressure situation and place it in any restaurant that has a Maitre d' next mix in a socially inept character such as Barry and something funny is bound to happen.

    After all of this we are finally taken out to dinner. The peculiar thing was that the dinner only lasts 15 minutes. This was a shame because the story could have spent more time on the losers that came to dinner. There was some great talent there, one being Jeff Dunham, a humorous ventriloquist who has been working stand up clubs for the last two decades. It felt like the director (Jay Roach) should have pumped the brakes, slowed up and gave these losers some more screen time. We did get another laugh riot when Therman and Barry had an invisible shoot out between their mind reading capabilities. Then it was over with a nice epilogue to the story through Barry's "Mouseterpieces".

    Should you see this movie? Ummm…OK, why not? There were some funny bits to it, the storyline was solid and the comedic actors were funny but didn't have to try too hard for the jokes. Rudd plays a good straight man in these situations where Carell and Galifianakis can play off of him quite easily.
    eneyeseekaywhy

    Dinner sucks

    In order to impress his girlfriend, Tim (Paul Rudd) needs to secure a promotion. So he decides to accept his bosses challenge; bring an 'idiot' to their annual 'Dinner for Winners'. A competition run by white-collar executives and disguised as a celebration of brilliance in unrecognised individuals. In reality, the meal is simply an opportunity for elitist senior-management types to laugh at some quirky and eccentric members of society. Tim's girlfriend tries to convince him the whole idea is abhorrent. Just as he is beginning to agree with her, he meets Barry (Steve Carell). An IRS worker, with a passion for creating art from taxidermied mice, Barry might just be the perfect man to help Tim win the competition.

    The US version of The Office has shown us that Carell can do awkward better than most and Anchorman proved his capabilities of making stupidity funny. However, his character here is completely unlikeable and, more often than not, irritating. His bowl haircut, glasses and protruding teeth, evoke bad seventies sitcoms. A time when this look would have been a stylists shorthand for 'socially inept'. Paul Rudd, on the other hand, is given little opportunity to make us laugh, playing two-dimensional straight man, Tim. Director Jay Roach's previous franchises (Austin Powers, Meet the Parents/Fockers) may not have been the greatest comedies of the past fifteen years, but delivered as and when expected. The problems with Dinner for Schmucks lie in the pacing and the writing. With a 114 minute runtime, it is simply too long. Entire characters and subplots are superfluous. It also suffers badly from second-act-drag, believing that given enough on-screen time we will somehow empathise with our two leads.

    Producer Sacha Baron Cohen (Borat, Bruno), seems to have called in a number of favours from celebrity friends and cast them in every available role. The idea, presumably, is that good performances can boost a weak script into something amusing. Of Course, this is not the case. Jemaine Clement (Flight of the Conchords) as avant-garde artiste, Kieran, makes the most of his characters nonsequiturs but only manages to raise a smirk at best. The same cannot be said for David Walliams (Little Britain), whose Swiss, aristocratic character, Mueller, is completely redundant in every way. The only worthy gag in almost two-hours is provided by Chris O' Dowd (The I.T. Crowd) as a blind swordsman. However having only a handful of lines and appearing twenty minutes before the credits roll, its far too little, far too late.

    Dinner for Schmucks starts with a premise full of comedic opportunities, but spends the next hour and a half ignoring these. The original, a French film from 1998 entitled The Dinner Game, was a social satire focusing on the ridiculous measures the aristocracy will go to amuse themselves. It was full of witty dialogue and, at 80 minutes long, it worked. As often happens, Hollywood seems to have missed the point and delivered a broad and bland remake.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      One of the film's writers, David Guion, was on set one day and noticed that Steve Carell was left handed. "I didn't know you were left handed" he remarked to the actor. "I'm not", replied Carell, "but my character is".
    • Gaffes
      Darla and Barry throw a bottle of wine on the door in Tim's apartment. In the next shot the mess from the wine has disappeared.
    • Citations

      Barry: Vincent Van Gogh. Everyone said to him, "You can't be a great painter, you only have one ear." And you know what he said? "I can't hear you."

    • Générique farfelu
      After the credits, A diorama is displayed of a stuffed mouse sitting in a burnt down house, with Barry heard laughing as he reveals that Fender's company has gone bust with Forbes Magazine naming him the "World's Biggest Loser."
    • Autres versions
      Trifecta-syndicated airings made two notable edits to the brunch scene:
      • The napkin reads "I'M HOT", instead of "I'M WET".
      • Barry's echo of Müeller's "Join yourself to her, in the name of love" is omitted, presumably because Barry could be interpreted as mocking Müeller's accent.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Late Show with David Letterman: Steve Carell/Selena Gomez/Sheryl Crow (2010)
    • Bandes originales
      The Fool on the Hill
      Written by John Lennon & Paul McCartney

      Performed by The Beatles

      Courtesy of Capitol Records LLC

      Under license from EMI Film & Television Music

      [Played over both the opening and end credits]

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Dinner for Schmucks?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 30 juillet 2010 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Dinner for Schmucks
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Westlake Village, Californie, États-Unis
    • sociétés de production
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Dreamworks Pictures
      • Spyglass Entertainment
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 69 000 000 $ US (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 73 026 337 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 23 527 839 $ US
      • 1 août 2010
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 86 855 739 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 54 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
      • SDDS
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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