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Le Dîner de cons

Titre original : Le dîner de cons
  • 1998
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 20min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
46 k
MA NOTE
Thierry Lhermitte and Jacques Villeret in Le Dîner de cons (1998)
Regarder Bande-annonce [OV]
Lire trailer1:39
1 Video
97 photos
Comédie

Un riche éditeur rencontre une personne stupide mais très gentille. L'éditeur avait l'intention de se moquer de lui, mais il se trouve que cette personne était la seule à rester avec lui lor... Tout lireUn riche éditeur rencontre une personne stupide mais très gentille. L'éditeur avait l'intention de se moquer de lui, mais il se trouve que cette personne était la seule à rester avec lui lorsque la vie de l'éditeur a commencé à se détériorer.Un riche éditeur rencontre une personne stupide mais très gentille. L'éditeur avait l'intention de se moquer de lui, mais il se trouve que cette personne était la seule à rester avec lui lorsque la vie de l'éditeur a commencé à se détériorer.

  • Réalisation
    • Francis Veber
  • Scénario
    • Francis Veber
  • Casting principal
    • Thierry Lhermitte
    • Jacques Villeret
    • Francis Huster
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    46 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Francis Veber
    • Scénario
      • Francis Veber
    • Casting principal
      • Thierry Lhermitte
      • Jacques Villeret
      • Francis Huster
    • 121avis d'utilisateurs
    • 65avis des critiques
    • 73Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:39
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos97

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux21

    Modifier
    Thierry Lhermitte
    Thierry Lhermitte
    • Pierre Brochant
    Jacques Villeret
    Jacques Villeret
    • François Pignon
    Francis Huster
    Francis Huster
    • Juste Leblanc
    Daniel Prévost
    Daniel Prévost
    • Lucien Cheval
    • (as Daniel Prevost)
    Alexandra Vandernoot
    Alexandra Vandernoot
    • Christine Brochant
    Catherine Frot
    Catherine Frot
    • Marlène Sasseur
    Benoît Bellal
    • Host 1
    Jacques Bleu
    • Host 3
    Philippe Brigaud
    Philippe Brigaud
    • Tanner (boomerang thrower)
    Michel Caccia
    • Guest 1
    Laurent Gendron
    • Guest 2
    Mykhaël Georges-Schar
    • Host 2
    Edgar Givry
    • Cordier
    Pierre-Arnaud Juin
    • Boissonade
    Daniel Martin
    Daniel Martin
    • Messignac
    Elvire Melliere
    • Gisèle
    Pétronille Moss
    • Louisette Blond
    • (as Petronille Moss)
    Christian Pereira
    Christian Pereira
    • Sorbier
    • Réalisation
      • Francis Veber
    • Scénario
      • Francis Veber
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs121

    7,646.4K
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    Avis à la une

    9jcanettis

    Hilarious!

    "Le Diner de Cons" is one of those great comedies that the French know really well how to produce: The action is fast, the scenes are hilarious, and the viewer just can't stop laughing as totally extraordinary things happen in totally ordinary circumstances. The mastery in this type of films is that they need not be big-budget productions ("LDdC" has been actually shot mostly inside a single apartment), while they manage to achieve a very high rating for their impeccable viewing pleasure they bring to us.

    "LDdC" is about a group of rather cruel friends, who have fun by organizing dinners in which they invite idiots and get amused by them. The winner is the one who will bring the biggest idiot, and Pierre (Lhermitte) thinks he was found the world champion in the face of Francois Pignon (Villeret). He therefore decides to invite him in his house for a drink, and then take him to the dinner. However, things do not go as planned, as during Pignot's stay in Pierre's house unbelievable things begin to happen...

    Villeret is simply amazing in his role as Pignon, standing above everyone else in this film. This should not mean that the other performances are not good, however: In fact, everyone does a good job, despite the fact that most actors perform very short appearances.

    "LDdC" is a movie that will make you laugh, but in fact, it will also make you think; behind the fun, the film conveys a very humane and meaningful message. Don't miss it! 9/10.
    10SuperS32

    Hilarious - definitely recommended

    I'll keep it short and sweet. This movie was hilarious - even if you've never watched a French movie in your life, this is one of the quirkiest movies you'll ever see. I was laughing the entire time. The acting was good and the directing average. But the writing and screenplay were absolutely fantastic. You don't need to know French to watch it as long as you can get your hands on a copy with subtitles. Many foreign movies require you pay attention to the imagery, etc., thus making it hard for those needing subtitles. In this one the script carries the movie. I watched Le Diner de cons about 5 or 6 years ago, and it definitely sparked my interest in foreign movies 10/10
    10ElMaruecan82

    Just because someone looks and sounds like an idiot doesn't mean that he is not one

    When I saw the face of Steve Carrel in "The Dinner of Schmucks" remake, I knew they got the meaning of the word totally wrong, 'cons' is not about being retarded or eccentric, it's a state of mind, something that doesn't strike the eyes, not at first sight anyway.

    "Con" is a generic insult in France that takes a lot of meanings, it either refers to a dumb or extremely naive person, a socially awkward geek, a dork, someone so blinded by a passion that he can't realize how ridicule he is in the eyes of common people, stupid is not the most faithful synonym, because a 'con' can have a high I.Q, but what do they all have in common, they don't have the intelligence of the situation, and are the target of mean-spirited people who use them as foils to appear smarter, and that they can easily be fooled allows society to label them as 'idiots'. This is sad but true, and Veber's "Diner de Cons" aka "The Dinner Game" builds its plot on a cruel purpose with mean spirited snobs inviting idiots to elect a winner at the end of the evening, and Thierry Lhermitte aka Pierre Brochant, a wealthy publisher, is one of these bad guys.

    There is a French word to describe a man like Brochant, a 'salaud', a bastard if you prefer, a guy eager to make fun of less smart people, while the so-called Dinner Game can be seen as a tacit bullying, all these dumb-chasers would argue that they don't harm anyone because the purpose of the game is not to let the idiots know why they were invited. It's like 'a crime without victims'. And the players really take their hateful game seriously, each participant having a sort of scout to find the right idiot, either a colleague eager to express some 'new' ideas, a man with strange hobbies, finding a good idiot is not that an easy task. And one day, Brochant receives a phone call from a friend who found a 'world champion': Jacques Villeret as François Pignon, a civil servant working in the Minister of Treasury and building replicas of landmarks with matchsticks, what a promising pedigree!

    Many people tend to minimize the emphasis on the word 'con' by arguing that we're all the idiots of someone. While it might be true, it doesn't appear to be the message of the film where the personality traits are clearly defined. While not a plain idiot, Pignon is a sweet and lovable buffoon and despite his meanness, Pierre Brochant strikes as a brilliant and intelligent person. The film doesn't try to reverse roles to demonstrate the former idea, and the lyrics of the opening song brilliantly deliver the message that age has nothing to do with brains, when we're an idiot; we're an idiot, period. The genius little song from George Brassens foreshadows the inevitability of the mayhem caused by François Pignon, directly affecting Pierre Brochant's life. And it all starts with the nice twist (indeed) when Brochant hurts his back while golfing and is forced to cancel his participation. After discovering how brilliantly dumb François Pignon is, he decides to go anyway, much to the reluctance of his wife, who therefore leaves him.

    The movie takes off when Brochant is left alone, incapable to move and with Pignon trying to help him, to see where his wife have gone. And as soon as the movie starts (the set-up took a little time, but for the best) the film features a succession of never-ending misunderstandings, gaffes, and remarkable displays of clumsiness that elevate "The Dinner Game" to a masterpiece level in the comedy of errors genre. Surprisingly, the film is mostly set in Brochant's luxurious apartment, conveying a sort of trapped sensation. The film is adapted from a play written by Francis Veber and the unity of time, space and plot contributes to a coherent plot getting crescendo, each disaster provoked by Pignon leading to a bigger disaster when he tries to make up for the first. In the progress, other characters make their entrance, Brochant's ex-friend played by a brilliant Francis Huster, Just Leblanc (whose name will create one of the most hilarious cases of misunderstanding in French cinema) not to mention the scene-stealing performance of Daniel Prevost as François's friend, a hard-nosed tax inspector. Alexandra Van Der Noot and Catherine Frot also deserve accolades for the two female parts that will get mixed up by the poor Mr. Pignon.

    The casting, while minimalist, is enough to conduct the movie with laughs and laughs, creating one of the greatest and most unanimously praised French comedies and Veber's true masterpiece. Indeed, Veber's comedies often relied on the simple but efficient buddy duo, with the white-faced clown and the Auguste, when the laughs mostly came from the reactions of the straight guy rather than the actions of the funny one, but this time, there's also a cynical yet delightful pleasure from seeing the Lhermitte character so tormented. His nightmarish journey seems deserved, and it would take a lot of pains to feel sorry for him because his wife left him, after all, she left him because he wanted to play a humiliating game. Not a villain or an antagonist, he's still a hardly redeemable character, and all the laughs are mixed with the satisfaction to see him get through this pain. As he'd say to Pignon, he avenged in one night all the idiots who ever participated to dinner games before, and he couldn't be truer.

    But as usual, Veber films don't take their 'seriousness' with seriousness, when we know where the film is going to, we're immediately surprised by a twist that gets the final spice, a masterpiece of wit, sophistication, laughs and cynicism, leading to one major conclusion : never take one's personality for granted. Indeed, just because someone looks and sounds like an idiot doesn't mean that he is not one.
    9edcottingham

    Hilarios and slightly poignant

    This is a very intelligent, hilarious, and slightly poignant movie. The 'dinner' of the title is a regular gathering at which some smug young Parisian gentlemen compete to invite the most amusingly ridiculous character as their guest. Pierre Brochant (Thierry Lhermitte) believes he has a sure winner in François Pignon (played brilliantly by Jacques Villeret) whose passion is the construction of intricate models from matchsticks. Ironically, it is Brochant who ends up looking the fool, morally if not intellectually. And it is the slightly sad but hilarious antihero Pignon who emerges as far the wiser of the two. Despite the premise, which seems to offends some delicate souls, this is a very humane, as well as witty, movie.
    9Galina_movie_fan

    Guess Who Is Coming For Dinner

    A group of well-to-do snobbish and obnoxious professionals have dinner parties every Wednesday to which each of them is required to bring an "idiot" as a guest. The victims have no idea that they are invited merely to be humiliated and their boorish "sponsors" compare their notes later to determine whose "idiot" was the best. Pierre Brochant( Thierry Lhermitte), the smug publisher thinks that he's got a winner in the tax accountant François Pignon (Jacques Villeret, sadly passed away in January 2005 - great French Comedian whose performance in "Robert and Robert" I enjoyed very much) who reproduces the famous landmarks with the matchsticks and would talk about them with never ending enthusiasm. Unfortunately for Pierre (but fortunately for us, the viewers) he throws his back just before the dinner and has to rely to Pignon's sincere generosity. The tables are turned and look who is an idiot after all...

    With the modest running time of 80 minutes, the "Dinner Game" is a delightful and very funny comedy. I would not expect anything else from Francis Veber, the director of Le Jouet, (1976) aka The Toy , La Chèvre, (1981) aka Knock On Wood, Les Compères, (1983) ... aka ComDads, and Les Fugitifs, (1986) and the writer for Le Grand blond avec une chaussure noire, (1972) ... aka The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Francis Veber's play premiered at the Théâtre des Variétés on 17-9-1993. Jacques Villeret played Pignon 600 times.
    • Gaffes
      At the beginning, the train has two locomotives, then with four, then back to two.
    • Citations

      François Pignon: [after hanging up the phone] It was your sister.

      Pierre Brochant: I don't have a sister.

      François Pignon: [appears confused] You don't? I said, "Who is this?". She said, "His sister".

      Pierre Brochant: [incredously to himself] He called Marlène!

      François Pignon: She's not your sister?

      Pierre Brochant: Her name is Marlene Hissister!

      François Pignon: How could I know? She said, "Marlene, his sister." It's confusing.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Francis Veber artisan du rire: La saga Pignon (2001)
    • Bandes originales
      Le Temps ne Fait rien à l'Affaire
      Music by Georges Brassens

      Lyrics by Georges Brassens

      Performed by Georges Brassens

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    FAQ

    • How long is Le Dîner de Cons?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 15 avril 1998 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Le Dîner de Cons
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Evecquemont, Yvelines, France(Exterior)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Gaumont
      • EFVE
      • TF1 Films Production
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 82 000 000 F (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 4 071 548 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 25 520 $US
      • 11 juil. 1999
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 4 071 548 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 20 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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