The wealthy editor Pierre Brochant and his friends have a competition: every Wednesday, each one of them invites the dumbest jackass he can find for a dinner, where each one of the guests is invited to talk about himself as much as possible. Later, after the guests say goodbye, the group of friends makes fun and elects the more stupid and imbecile guest. Pierre invites François Pignon, a man that works in the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and makes “maquettes” to forget his beloved wife, who had went away with a friend of him two years ago, for the dinner. However, a tough pain in one vertebra of his spinal column does not allow Pierre to meet his friends for the game and he stays alone with solicitous, but clumsy and stupid François in his apartment. Every attempt of François helping Pierre goes wrong, becoming the night of Pierre a terrible nightmare. –IMDb
This prolific French writer and director originally intended to become a doctor but switched to journalism before finding his calling on the stage and screen. Francis Veber began his writing career while serving in the military, contributing to BLED, a publication of the Algerian Army. After his military discharge, he worked as a radio reporter and then segued to writing scripts for the TV series “L’Agence interim”. In 1968, Veber enjoyed his first stage success with the play “L’Enlevement/The Kidnapping”, which enjoyed an eight-month run in Paris. His second play, “Le Contrat/The Contract” led to a scripting assignment for the short film “Appelez-moi Mathilde/Call Me Mathilde” (1970).
With 1971’s “Il etait une fois un flic/There Once Was a Cop” (1971), Veber began his feature career in earnest. For much of the 1970s, he served as writer of a number of successful, farcical comedies that recalled the work of Neil Simon in that most revolved around odd couples. Among his more popular… read more
Visto su consiglio del mio ex professore di biologia. E' l'essenza della comicità francese - quasi una versione maschile e un po' meno bella di "8 donne e un mistero" -, e mi ha ricordato un bel po' di persone conosciute. Finale un pelo buonista, ma si merita le quattro stelle per le favolose espressioni del protagonista.