Zig Zag Story (1983)
Directed by Patrick Schulmann

Comedy

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Zig Zag Story (1983)
The inevitable sequel to the massively popular comedy Et la tendresse?... Bordel! (1979) is this uninhibited anarchic romp which looks as if it was conceived to break every taboo in the book whilst parodying social attitudes to love and sex.  In common with virtually every other film that Patrick Schulmann directed, this excessively boisterous sequel is painfully uneven. There are places where it is brilliantly funny, but many of the gags are excruciatingly laboured, to the point that you doubt whether you will live long enough to hear/see the punchline.

Not surprisingly, given this was the era when political incorrectness was at its most extreme, the humour is mostly in appallingly bad taste, but lacking the restraint of more family-friendly comedies of this time, the laughs are more readily extracted. The classiest thing about the film is a wonderfully incongruous Fabrice Luchini. Effortlessly, he steals the show as a compulsive voyeur - although the scenes where he is seen drooling over a pre-teen girl and later when he is seduced by a stripping nun come dangerously close to crossing the line into X-rated naughtiness.  There are some great jokes, but the film really is just too silly, too O.T.T., too provocative to be anywhere near as satisfying as Patrick Schulmann's earlier Bordel film.
© James Travers 2007
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Film Synopsis

A drop of water falling from the guttering of a building causes a chain reaction ending in a traffic jam which allows Gil Darmon, an aspiring painter, to meet Cat, a radio presenter.  It's love at first sight and it's not long before Cat has moved into the loft apartment which Gil shares with his friend Bob, a sex-obsessed photographer.  When a young girl is abducted, Gil finds himself the prime suspect...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Patrick Schulmann
  • Script: Patrick Schulmann
  • Cinematographer: Gilberto Azevedo
  • Music: Patrick Schulmann
  • Cast: Diane Bellego (Catherine), Christian François (Gil Darmon), Fabrice Luchini (Bob Hemler), Ronny Coutteure (Romo), Jean-Marie Fertey (Charles Gaudin), Philippe Khorsand (Police inspector), Claude Marcault (Simone), Daniel Sarky (Paul, owner of Radio F1), Didier Attar (Le jeune), Béatrice Avoine (Mona), René Bastide (Homme travail), Pierre Baton (The prefect), Pierre Belon (Juge), Nathalie Bertheaux (Fille Cicatrice), Michel Bertay (Minister), André Bézu (Médecin), Jorge Blanco (Journaliste), Bonnafet Tarbouriech (Un détenu), Jean-François Bonnassies (Détenu bucolique), Annie Bourgoin (Fille poilue)
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 100 min

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