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Barnie et ses petites contrariétés
2001 Comedy / Romance
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Credits
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Director: Bruno Chiche
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Script: Bruno Chiche, Alain Layrac, Fabrice Roger-Lacan
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Photo: Régis Blondeau
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Music: Alexandre Desplat
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Cast: Fabrice Luchini (Barnie (Barnard Barnich)),
Nathalie Baye (Lucie Barnich),
Marie Gillain (Margot),
Hugo Speer (Mark),
Serge Hazanavicius (Alexandre),
Mélanie Bernier (Cécile),
Warren Zavatta (Bo),
Thomas Chabrol (Orient-Express steward),
Debbie Chazen (Jenny),
Ben O'Sullivan (Jeremie)
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Country: France
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Language: French
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Runtime: 80 min
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Aka: Barnie's Minor Annoyances
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Summary
Barnie is a conventional businessman, with a home in Calais and a job in London.
He has an adoring wife, a teenage daughter, a young mistress, Margot, and a gay lover,
Mark. Barnie's love life is complicated but he manages to keep it together, until
the day he receives the same birthday present from Margot, Mark and his daughter – a trip
to Venice on the Orient Express. Deciding to take his wife on the luxury train journey,
he writes letters to Mark and Margot declining their offers, but these somehow get mixed
up. Offended, Mark and Margot set out for Barnie’s house in France to tell a few
home truths. They could not have chosen a worse time – Barnie is about to discover
that his seemingly loyal wife Lucy has been having an affair with their daughter’s history
teacher, Alexandre…
Review
Mirth on the Orient Express? It may not be the most original or intelligent
of French comedies in recent years, but it’s hard to deny that Barnie
et ses petites contrariétés is a very funny film, an exuberant bedroom
farce which just about manages to avoid tipping over into crass silliness. It’s
a first full length film for Bruno Chiche, although he has made a number of short films
over the past decade. Chiche’s inexperience is apparent not just in the quality
of the acting – which is wildly over-the-top in places – but also in the film’s uneven
pace and tone. Despite its obvious faults, this is a film that is genuinely entertaining
and, in a few places, laugh-out-loud funny. Whilst it’s a shame to see so many big
name actors failing to live up to their reputation (Marie Gillain and Serge Hazanavicius
are pretty well wasted in this film), it’s a treat to see Fabrice Luchini playing straight
Mr Bean-style farce instead of the intellectual kind of comedy for which he is better
known. It’s not clever, it's not particularly memorable, but it is a wonderfully
diverting piece of fun.
© James Travers 2007
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