Fools Rush In-French Style-Francis Veber’s The Dinner Game
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
The Dinner Game, written and directed by Francis Veber, 1998
Yeah, like the old song went “fools rush in where angels fear
to tread” but in the comedy of errors under review, Francis Veber’s The Dinner Game in French with English
subtitles, one is never quite sure, at least of the characters on the screen,
who the fool is and who should have paid attention when those damn angels
stayed away. This one is an hour and twenty minutes of guessing just who is the
fool and who is being taken in. In places a bit heavy-handed with some too intricate
or implausible occurrences but overall worth your time if you have the time to
spare.
Here’s why I, for one, am wondering who the fool was. One Brochant,
a prominent bourgeois publisher belongs to an exclusive club of prominent businessmen
who, having apparently nothing better to do, have an “idiot’s night” at their weekly
soirees. This “idiot” business for the seemingly chic and high-toned members is
for each one to bring an “idiot” to the meeting and have the various guests
compete, unknown to them, for the champion idiot of the night. Yeah, already I
can see you are rooting for the idiots just like I was on this one.
These “idiots,” harmless men like the “star” of the film, Pignon, an employee of the Finance Ministry,
a tax guy okay, who had a maybe outsized passion for building replicas of famous
landmarks-out of match sticks are the
kind of contestants for the meetings. So the question of idiot might be just a
bit overplayed by the club members. In any case the fools, the club members
that is, have “talent” spotters searching Paris for appropriate candidates.
That was how Brochant wound up with Pignon. Old Brochant would come to rue the
day that he went up against old Pignon and that is where the comedy of errors
come in. Prior to meeting Pignon he had had a back injury that put him out of
whack and in the end would depend on our tax guy to get around. Would also come
to depend on Pignon trying to find out where his estranged wife was after she could
not, rightly, persuade him to give up the juvenile activities around idiot
night. One thing Pignon did as the errors escalated was to expose Brochant’s mistress
to his wife. Oops! For other such mishaps on the way to resolving the
relationship between Brochant and Pignon watch this one. Yeah, fools rush in.
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