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Le Grand Restaurant

Original title: Le grand restaurant
  • 1966
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Le Grand Restaurant (1966)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer3:58
1 Video
22 Photos
SlapstickActionComedy

Top-notch french restaurant owner Monsieur Septime is involved into crime when one of his famous guests disappears.Top-notch french restaurant owner Monsieur Septime is involved into crime when one of his famous guests disappears.Top-notch french restaurant owner Monsieur Septime is involved into crime when one of his famous guests disappears.

  • Director
    • Jacques Besnard
  • Writers
    • Jacques Besnard
    • Jean Halain
    • Louis de Funès
  • Stars
    • Louis de Funès
    • Bernard Blier
    • Maria-Rosa Rodriguez
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jacques Besnard
    • Writers
      • Jacques Besnard
      • Jean Halain
      • Louis de Funès
    • Stars
      • Louis de Funès
      • Bernard Blier
      • Maria-Rosa Rodriguez
    • 12User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 3:58
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos21

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    Top cast41

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    Louis de Funès
    Louis de Funès
    • Monsieur Septime
    Bernard Blier
    Bernard Blier
    • Le commissaire divisionnaire
    Maria-Rosa Rodriguez
    • Sophia
    Venantino Venantini
    Venantino Venantini
    • Henrique
    Juan Ramírez
    • Le général
    Noël Roquevert
    Noël Roquevert
    • Le ministre
    Folco Lulli
    Folco Lulli
    • Le président Novalès
    Yves Arcanel
    • Henri
    René Berthier
    Albert Dagnant
    • Un conspirateur
    Robert Dalban
    Robert Dalban
    • Le conspirateur francais
    Eugene Deckers
    Eugene Deckers
    • Le complice de Novalès
    • (as Eugène Deckers)
    Robert Destain
    • Le baron
    Bernard Dumaine
    • Le client satisfait
    Jacques Dynam
    Jacques Dynam
    • Un serveur
    Guy Grosso
    Guy Grosso
    • Un serveur
    Jacques Legras
    Jacques Legras
    • L'agent de police
    Roger Lumont
    • Un dîneur
    • Director
      • Jacques Besnard
    • Writers
      • Jacques Besnard
      • Jean Halain
      • Louis de Funès
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.77.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7brkcu

    A Great First Course into Louis de Funès Feast of Funny

    Monsieur Septime (de Funès) is your (stereo)typical French restaurant manager...you know, the kind that perpetually inflates his own ego, disparages his employees and treats his patrons as royalty (unless, of course, they're German). While the film's plot is rather canned and disjointed, what makes this worth watching is Louis de Funès himself, one of France's most iconic comedians and expressionists. His uncanny ability to rapidly contort his face and externalize his character's frustrations effectively erase the issue of the language barrier on the film's humor, and is done so in a way that doesn't relegate it to the bottom shelf slapstick comedy. Though subtitles may be required, Le Grand Restaurant is a great first course introduction to the feast of funny from de Funès.
    7ma-cortes

    Amusing and funny French comedy in which Louis de Funes performs a stiff restaurant owner

    In this Louis de Funes recital he is Monsieur Septime who runs his Paris resturant : Chez Septime in military style, controlling strictly his waiters and cooks. One day, receives a famous guest, a fatty president : Folco Lulli of a South American country. Things go wrong, when Septime becomes involved into a kidnapping.

    Hilarious comedy with emotion, mayhem, pursuits, car crashes, entertainment and amusement. Louis de Funes steals the show with his extreme mimic and sympathy in a role that fits him as a glove as a greedy man who owns his renowned restaurant with iron fist. Louis de Funes vehicle, outstanding thanks to his sympathetic overacting, as he puts strange faces, gestures and excessive gesticulation. Here Louis plays a restaurant owner who runs manu military by controlling his workers here and there, even disguising himself, and when a guest is kidnapped, looks as if Septime has something to do with it. From his first characters as Devil and 10 Commandments, Captain Fracassa, La Vendetta, until his greatest hits as Don't look now we are being shot along with Bourvil, Fantomas Trilogy along with Jean Marais : Fantomas, Fantomas strikes again, Fantomas vs Scotland Yard to the Cadillac Man, Wing and the thigh and his final movie The mad adventures of Rabbi Jacob, Louis de Funes was a brilliant comedian. Although Funes really excels in Ludovic Cruchot series as Le Gendarme of Saint Tropez, Gendarme in Balade, Le Gendarme in N. Y. , Le Gendarme and creatures of outer space, and his last film feature : Le Gendarmes and the Gendarmettes. He is well accompanied by a good cast as Bernard Blier playing a stubborn commissario, the Italian Venantino Venantini and Folco Lulli as President Nogales who disappears when dining at Septime restaurant, furthermore, brief appearances as two waiters of Michael Modo and Guy Grosso, usual colleagues to Louis De Funes in Gendarme Saint-Tropez series.

    Well produced by one of the best French producers, Alain Poire who financed other Funes outings . Including a lively and jolly musical score by Jean Marion. The motion picture was well directed by Jacques Besnard at his film debut. If you like Funes' overacting you'll enjoy this one.
    7ElMaruecan82

    Delicious starters ... but an insipid main course ...

    "Le Grand Restaurant" stars the French comedian Louis de Funès in his most typical role as Mr. Septime, a tyrannic restaurant manager who's as ruthless with the subordinates as he's spineless when he meets his match.

    One scene perfectly captures this personality. Septime reproaches a waiter for having put parsley instead of tarragon on the deviled eggs. The poor waiter insists that it was the chef's idea, fine; Septime is ready to confront him. In the kitchen, straightened out by the towering chef, Septime invokes a misunderstanding and swallows his pride without seasoning. "Too much people in this kitchen" says the chef, Septime gets the message and back to his territory where he can impose his commanding presence to the Parisian upper class.

    The film picks up to an escalation of gags that demonstrate Funès' extraordinary talent, both on the verbal or the non-verbal department: non-verbal when he uses his trademark kissing sound to discreetly call his waiters, verbal when the Minister can't remember one of his men's title, to which Septime retorts with a dry 'never mind', verbal when he talks about his poor mother, non-verbal when he pretends to laugh at the Minister's joke before he even finished. And these two talents wonderfully converge during one scene of anthology.

    The Commissioner of Police (played by the legendary Bernard Blier) politely asks Septime to reveal the secret recipe of his famous potatoes soufflé to his German colleague, Dr. Muller. What follows is hilarious beyond words, and epitomizes why Funès was the greatest French comical actor. After listing the ingredients, Septime start to impersonate some mimics of Adolf Hitler while a subtle game of shadows make him look exactly like the Hitler. This superbly crafted scene culminates with the hilarious "Saltz '(pause) und (pause again) und" then in a loud military voice "Muskat Nuss! Muskat Nuss! Herr Mueller".

    If you haven't seen the film, you can find several clips of this scene on Youtube, to have an idea about the summits of hilarity "Le Grand Restaurant" reaches. And the part ends with a perfect punch line when he leaves the fellow officers. At that moment, we're ready to follow Septime anywhere and it goes even funnier when he decides to spy on his own staff. With a ridiculous wig and effeminate manners, he plays the annoying prick with perfection, swinging from a table to another, ordering radishes and yogurt, and from the poor puzzled sommelier a half-dry water (not too dry, or maybe half-soft would be better).

    Septime gets finally on the nerves of the poor maître d'hotel (Pierre Tornade) who comes to him and ask him if he wouldn't like a carrot with his radish, before noticing that the hair of his customer has a strange way to move above the head. That he could fool them with the disguise so long was already a subtle gag but that proves how much disbelief we can suspend for the sake of good gags. The disastrous investigation efficiently highlighted the lack of seriousness reigning in the restaurant, whether it's waiters fooling around or a pianist taking the change with a furtive foot, so it was time for Septime to organize a training session.

    The training precedes the visit of an important South-American leader; and again it's a showcase of all the talents that shines under Funès' influence, from the boot-licker always referred as "my little Roger", to the sommelier who seemed to have spent quite a good time in the cave. After a how-to-lift-your-plate and never-forget-to-smile lesson, Septime tests their skills with a sumptuous ballet dance, and it's certainly one of the funniest scenes in all French Cinema's history. Carrying their plates, in a total synchronization, following a nice and catchy tune, the men dance and dance very well, making us wondering where this is going.

    The music goes crescendo and all of sudden, as if the film was fueled with the right comical energy, it finally implodes into a laugh-out-loud moment of pure zaniness, where all the waiters break their plates, shout several "hey", and engage in a great Cossack dance with Septime in the middle. Right now, I feel the urge to watch this scene again, because no words are enough to describe how hilarious it is. It's so unpredictable and yet so perfect, this is the highlight of the film, and it never goes funnier than that. The last real laughs come with the national anthem played at the President's arrival, a sound that is nothing like the grandiose fanfare Septime briefed his employees, especially the pianist whose fingers will suffer from a several display of Septime's vengeful furor.

    Then, the film pursues with the surprise à la Septime, a sort of dessert, imbibed with Grand Marnier, some fire, and boom! it's the explosion and El Presidente mysteriously disappears. Blier takes the leads, and if his interactions with De Funès are never totally unfunny, but something is definitely lost. The whole film could have been set in the restaurant, not without a specific plot line, it would have been hilarious, but the cat-and-mouse thriller it turns into isn't worthy of the hilarious first act I just described. The plot gets so nonsensical it makes you wonder why they put so much effort to make us care for these hilarious waiters if we had to focus on gangster-like figures.

    "Le Grand Restaurant" is the perfect illustration of what I call the De Funès syndrome, a film with a hilarious first act and disappointing conclusion. And out of all the Funès movies, it's the most obvious one. I watched it a lot with my father, whenever he says how great it is, I know he'll add "except for the second act", sometimes, we just watch the first act, although De Funès does his best to save the day in the second, but it's a real shame because the first act gives the higher measure of his talent.
    7leplatypus

    The moment « El Presidente » vanishes, the story too ! (vhs) (DVD)

    A cult comedy is from my point of view, a movie in which you can't remember all the funny moments and therefore, you are always happy to discover them again and again.

    So, there, I knew that De Funes was a terrible, tyrannic boss of a great restaurant but his manners eluded me while they are really funny! He's truly the best actor in this field and beyond, a very talented one. As Al (Pacino), I feel that De Funes exudes humanity, compassion and class behind all his jokes…

    In addition, as it figures among the oldest movies I saw, it was great to see Paris an half-century ago. Besides cars and trends, I feel that Paris was more "green" with trees than actually.

    Unfortunately, when the main thing is served, the script becomes strange: a mix between Bond for the aquatic car and the Pink Panther for the winter sequence… We are far away of the restaurant!

    In conclusion, great appetizers but the menu left me wanting for more!
    hackapump

    Superb vehicle for a comedic genius

    I love de Funés too, but I can't claim to have seen all of his movies; (he made like a hundred, right?) I will say that this one is absolutely hilarious though.

    De Funés plays Septime, the despotic owner of a high class Paris restaurant, one which entertains the Paris glitterati as well as ministers of the French government. Once a foreign president disappears in the middle of Septime's grand number of lighting fire to a fancy dessert, Septime finds himself in an escalating drama. The police inspector suspects him, a revolutionary group from the missing president's country is after him, and the president's entourage blames him and demands he helps them find the missing head of state. Everyone is looking for the president, and they all ask of a terrified Septime to find him.

    The poor Septime travels effortlessly (and lightning fast) between the sheer horror of finding himself in this situation, and the hilarious fits he throws whenever a staff member of his fails to meet perfection. The catch phrase of the movie is an angry kissing sound Septime makes whenever he wants to call an employee's attention to himself, without disturbing the guests, and it never gets tired.

    I once heard a rumour that de Funés in person was exactly like the high-strung choleric characters he played, and thusly passed away too soon in a heart attack. I have no idea if this is true, but you do get the sense that he is more or less playing himself, which makes for some very convincing comedy. The man was a comedic genius, and this movie is a superb vehicle for him.

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    Related interests

    Leslie Nielsen in Y a-t-il un flic pour sauver la reine ? (1988)
    Slapstick
    Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Action
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    Comedy

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First film directed by Jacques Besnard.
    • Goofs
      When the sliding upside-down car finally comes to a stop on the frozen lake, you can clearly see that there's no one inside it, which conflicts with the close up interior shots of Monsieur Septime and the secretary.
    • Connections
      Featured in Louis de Funès ou Le pouvoir de faire rire (2003)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 9, 1966 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Languages
      • French
      • German
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Restaurant
    • Filming locations
      • Barrage de Tignes, Tignes, Savoie, France(dam)
    • Production company
      • Gaumont International
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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