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La Folie des grandeurs

Original title: La folie des grandeurs
  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
8.5K
YOUR RATING
Louis de Funès and Yves Montand in La Folie des grandeurs (1971)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer3:18
1 Video
99+ Photos
ParodyAdventureComedyHistory

In 17th-century Spain, the Minister of Finance tries to dishonor the queen with an overly complex plan.In 17th-century Spain, the Minister of Finance tries to dishonor the queen with an overly complex plan.In 17th-century Spain, the Minister of Finance tries to dishonor the queen with an overly complex plan.

  • Director
    • Gérard Oury
  • Writers
    • Gérard Oury
    • Danièle Thompson
    • Marcel Jullian
  • Stars
    • Louis de Funès
    • Yves Montand
    • Alice Sapritch
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    8.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gérard Oury
    • Writers
      • Gérard Oury
      • Danièle Thompson
      • Marcel Jullian
    • Stars
      • Louis de Funès
      • Yves Montand
      • Alice Sapritch
    • 26User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 3:18
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos126

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    Top cast31

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    Louis de Funès
    Louis de Funès
    • Don Salluste de Bazan
    Yves Montand
    Yves Montand
    • Blaze
    Alice Sapritch
    Alice Sapritch
    • Dona Juana
    Karin Schubert
    Karin Schubert
    • La Reine
    Alberto de Mendoza
    Alberto de Mendoza
    • Le Roi
    Don Jaime de Mora y Aragón
    Don Jaime de Mora y Aragón
    • Briego, Un Grand D'Espagne
    Eduardo Fajardo
    Eduardo Fajardo
    • Un Grand d'Espagne
    Antonio Pica
    Antonio Pica
    • Un Grand d'Espagne
    Joaquín Solís
    • Un Grand d'Espagne
    • (as Joachim Solis)
    Venantino Venantini
    Venantino Venantini
    • Del Basto
    Gabriele Tinti
    Gabriele Tinti
    • Don Cesar
    Paul Préboist
    Paul Préboist
    • Le muet
    Sal Borgese
    Sal Borgese
    • Le borgne
    • (as Salvatore Borgese)
    Astrid Frank
    Astrid Frank
    • Dame d'honneur au bébé
    Robert Le Béal
      Clément Michu
      La Polaca
      La Polaca
      • Danseuse anniversaire
      Leopoldo Trieste
      Leopoldo Trieste
      • Giuseppe inventeur bombe
      • Director
        • Gérard Oury
      • Writers
        • Gérard Oury
        • Danièle Thompson
        • Marcel Jullian
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews26

      7.18.5K
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      Featured reviews

      7tomquick

      dumber and dumber

      Another one of those 4 euro VHS specials from the dusty bin, but one I was looking forward to seeing. I thought it was pleasantly passable and will watch it again. Highlights: Defunes is funny as always, squeaking and quacking like a broken duck call. To quote from one of the earlier films "Il m'epate!" he's astonishing in being able to deliver so much physical comedy. Bouncing around like a beach ball, puffed up like a banty rooster, barely able to keep his giant ego intact while being chased by peasants with pitchforks or trying to escape a bedroom peccadillo. And I love his mugging - especially the greedy glitter in his squinty eyes.

      Yves Montand is surprisingly funny. The final scene where he and Defunes are stuck on the windlass as human donkeys in some nameless North African desert is hilarious. But all in all I think Bourvil did this kind of role better. Montand is suave and dumb, while Bourvil is dumb yet impossibly suave, and has a touch of human kindness. I do like Montand as Papet in the Florette films, and even more so with a cigarette hanging from his lips in Wages of Fear. I like him here, too, but he does suave and sinister best.

      All in all, entertaining. But I'll watch the Corniaud several times before I watch this again.
      8ElMaruecan82

      Montand towering over De Funès at the height of his comical power...

      In 1970, director Gérard Oury was the king of French popular comedy, having conquered the highest box-office summits with "The Sucker" and "The Great Stroll", both starring Louis de Funès and Bourvil. "Third time's a charm" Oury probably figured when he was planning to feature the memorable duo in a comical adaptation of Victor Hugo's "Ruy Blas", a tale of ambitions, convoluted plots, schemes and masquerades set in the flamboyant world-ruling Spain of the 17th century. Oury had the reputation, the capability and more than anything, the dough.

      But it was fate that took a stand against him, for the great Bourvil failed the whole world of cinema and died in the most untimely fashion in 1970 at the age of 52, leaving French cinema orphan of his likability. But De Funès was at the peak of his career and he needed a partner, not a sidekick, a real co-star. Gérard Oury was at loss until Simone Signoret suggested her husband, Yves Montand. Montand was a singer and dancer but his romantic aura earned him many memorable leading man roles; it was time for him to display the natural comedic talent he owed to his music-hall days. And Montand pulls a superb performance as De Funès valet.

      There's a natural complementarity different from the one with Bourvil, but with comedic potential as well. Bourvil was the 'lovable' average guy and De Funès the bossy one with a hair-trigger temper, but Montand is everything De Funès is not, whether in looks or personality. De Funès can manipulate him but the novelty is that he can envy him secretly. The two opposite attract as they say, Saluste is the King Minsitry's of Finance, Louis de Funès at his cruelest, meanest and scroogiest, he's like a live-action version of French famous comic-book caliph Iznogoud or Disney's Prince John, spotting a ridiculous hat with two green bobbles. When he comes to take the taxes, and a poor official laments that the people are poor Saluste turns his head and the bobbles hit the guy's face "That's normal, poor are meant to be very poor and rich very rich".

      Now, this was the plain-villainous role De Funès' needed, but never vileness at the expenses of sympathy, even something as ridicule as his bobbles makes him look more grotesque than villainous. And Montand is the handsome, resourceful and clever valet who only plays the fool to fool his master, but he's not to be overshadowed by De Funès, he can be romantic, hell he can even be funny. The scene where he starts dancing the flamenco much to his master's displeasure is simply Montand establishing his presence, and the scene where Saluste orders him to walk on his knees because he doesn't want to look smaller is De Funès feeling literally towered.

      "Delusions of Grandeurs" starts with the perfect casting choice and then all it takes is a sweeping and swashbuckling story that would have made Cecil B. De Mille jealous. This is a summit of French comedy as one of the first high-budgeted movies made for the sake of laughs, the opening sets the tone, it's fast-paced, exhilarating and served by a score made by Michel Polnareff and that supposedly spoofs Western Spaghetti's themes, spoof or no spoof, in its own right, it's one of the most memorable scores of French cinema. And thanks to the budget, to the setting in the magnificent palaces of Alhambra or in the desert of Almeria (to represent the Barbarians region), Oury gives a tremendous believability to his story, enhancing the two comical and romantic effects, but ultimately even the romances are vehicles to the comedy.

      The plot involves the ambition of Saluste to take vengeance from the Queen (a German young girl) who just deprived him from his rank and fortune, by using Blaze as a foil, but Blaze falls in love with the beautiful girl and just when you think the material will turn into sappiness, there's a wonderful quiproquo involving the duenna, a severe no-nonsense killjoy played by Alice Sapritch, Dona Juana. One of the best twists of the film is to see the heart of this old hag melt and falling in love with Blaze, and culminating in an expected strip-tease moment, one of the funniest scenes of French cinema. This is De Funès' film, no doubt about it, but you also remember it from the performances of Montand and Sapritch, who even steal from him the final laugh.

      Of course, the film has aged a little at times, but this also features Louis de Funès at the top of his game as an irredeemable greedy man, representative on the corners one's ambition might drive him, it's the culmination of a certain vision of French cinema with comedy being the most important genre. The film didn't reach the six-million breach which was disappointing by Oury's standards but it was a huge popular success, full of immortal quotes, one of them being the 'Gold' scene playing on the rhyming effect of "Or" with common French words and some slapstick moments borrowed from Looney Tunes or spoof movies, like the bath scene, Saluste checking how a one-eyed man can see and his gasping at the film's climax, not to mention a few camel laughing and an Arab proud of having the most mundane desert jail.

      And when criticized for making a popular cinema (yes, this was the New Wave days said) Oury came back with the best answer, refusing the use of this word "From Euripides to Anouilh ou Pinter, who ever dreamed to play in front of empty chairs? Making message movies is fashion, my message is to make people laugh." When people laugh, they're not mean. How true is that, and how great it is to laugh at mean people, especially when they're played by De Funès.
      10chris12345678

      The most enjoyable and funniest French comedy of all time

      A great performance from France's Charlie Chaplin - Luis de Funes. This movie is about a money-loving ruthless tax collector in the renaissance Spain, who loses his job and is determined to get it back. One of de Funes' best acts, and a very good job by Yves Montand as his servant. If you don't die laughing while watching this film you may safely assume that you don't have a sense of humor.
      9fedtho

      A delight for french speaking audiences - how does it work for others?

      As all other comments have pointed out, this is a real delight, thanks to top acting and directing talent, great dialogs, clever parody of Morricone and spaghetti westerns... I know the film by heart, as it has been on french TV at least once a year since it was made: 30 years ago! I'd really be interested in knowing what kind of entertainment value people from the USA, people who are neither living near France nor in a french speaking environment, find in this movie. Because it seems so very specifically french to me...

      And I noticed that more or less every comment here comes from someone who's got either a language or some other European strings attached helping them getting the movie's humor.

      Louis de Funès is a cult figure in France, he is an artist apart from everyone else. I love him, and I would be so curious to know what effect he, as well as that french comedy style, have on someone who doesn't have my cultural background...

      Anyway, to anyone who has the opportunity to see this film, it's quite a curiosity, unique in its own way!
      9gullab

      Funniest film I've seen!

      This movie is something my mother and her brothers have talked about since I can remember myself. It was showed on TV here in Iceland some 30 years ago and after few minutes when they realized how funny it was, they threw a videotape in to own it. Couple of years later the Adventures of Jacob the Rabbin was also showed and of course they made sure to own that one too. Since then they've been on the lookout for French comedies. I finally saw this movie 2 weeks ago.

      I don't speak French (besides "oui", "mademoiselle" and "monsieur") but just looking at Louis de Funès and Yves Montand talking and acting is hilarious! The plot is more than in many comedies today, it's timeless in a way, you only need to have eyes or ears to enjoy this film! The second time I saw this film I was laughing before the scenes had happened.

      Truly a masterpiece. I'm beginning to adore French movies, I think.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        The role of Blaze was written with Bourvil in mind, which would have marked Gérard Oury's fourth collaboration with the actor, and his third time pairing him alongside Louis de Funès, after Le Corniaud (1965) and La Grande Vadrouille (1966). After Bourvil passed away from cancer in September 1970, Oury and co-writer Danièle Thompson were at a party talking to actress Simone Signoret, who suggested her husband Yves Montand take on the role, which was completely rewritten. Oury compared the two takes on the character to valets made famous in plays by Molière, with Bourvil's being a "Sganarelle" and Montand's a "Scapin".
      • Connections
        Featured in Montand à la rencontre de Pagnol (1986)
      • Soundtracks
        Générique
        Written and Performed by Michel Polnareff

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • December 13, 1971 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • France
        • Spain
        • Italy
        • West Germany
      • Official site
        • Gaumont (France)
      • Languages
        • French
        • German
        • Spanish
      • Also known as
        • Les Grands d'Espagne
      • Filming locations
        • El Escorial, Madrid, Spain(the King returning from hunting)
      • Production companies
        • Gaumont International
        • Mars Film
        • Coral Films
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Budget
        • FRF 20,000,000 (estimated)
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        1 hour 48 minutes
      • Sound mix
        • Mono
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.66 : 1

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