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The Closet

 
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The Closet

  • Director: Francis Veber
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Workplace Comedy, Satire
  • Themes: Office Politics, Work Ethics, Cons and Scams
  • Main Cast: Daniel Auteuil, Gérard Depardieu, Thierry Lhermitte, Michèle Laroque, Michel Aumont
  • Release Year: 2001
  • Country: FR
  • Run Time: 84 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

While there are plenty of stories about gay men who have pretended to be straight for the sake of their careers, this tart comedy from France considers the dilemma of a straight man doing just the opposite. Francois Pignon (Daniel Auteuil) is an accountant whose personality is bland to the point of being nonexistent; he's been down in the dumps ever since his wife left him two years ago, and he becomes even more depressed when he learns that his boss is planning on firing him after 20 years of loyal service. Francois is seriously considering suicide until his next-door neighbor Belone (Michel Aumont) comes up with a plan to save his career. Belone finds some photos snapped at an especially randy gay nightclub, and using his computer, he pastes Francois' face over that of one of the participants. He sends copies of the doctored picture to several of Francois' co-workers, and soon everyone at the office is convinced the quiet little man has a flamboyant secret life. The firm's CEO, Kopel (Jean Rochefort), now has second thoughts about firing Francois, since letting an employee go who is known to be gay could invite a sexual discrimination suit. Meanwhile, the firm's public relations man, Guillaume (Thierry Lhermitte), is dealing with Felix (Gérard Depardieu), an employee relations executive who is well known as a narrow-minded thug. In order to counter charges that he's a rampant homophobe, Guillaume instructs Felix to make friends with Francois, and soon Felix is spending so much time with Francois (while fighting his own internal revulsion) that his wife wonders if he's seeing another woman. Le Placard was writer and director Francis Veber's first film after his international hit Le Diner de Cons -- in which the leading character was also named Francois Pignon. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

A mostly agreeable farce buoyed by the considerable talents of its stars, Le Placard is best when it is content to be a mild send-up of the modern workplace. The plot is slight and has a nasty streak that is both refreshing and occasionally jarring. The main reason it comes off well at all is the endearing, highly sympathetic lead performance by Daniel Auteuil, who never succumbs to the silliness of the screenplay, instead making his sad-sack accountant a real person. Gérard Depardieu is also effective, nicely sending up his own screen persona and wisely never begging for adorability while playing a mostly unlikable character. The film isn't terribly memorable, but it is sure to be markedly better than the American remake it will most likely receive. ~ Jason Clark, All Movie Guide

Cast

Jean Rochefort - Kopel; Alexandra Van Der Noot - Christine; Stanislas Crevillen; Marianne Groves

Credit

Hugues Tissandier - Art Director, Françoise Menidrey - Casting, Franck Jouard - Casting, Jacqueline Bouchard - Costume Designer, Bernard Seitz - First Assistant Director, Francis Veber - Director, Georges Klotz - Editor, Vladimir Cosma - Composer (Music Score), Philippe Houdart - Camera Operator, Luciano Tovoli - Cinematographer, Yves Agostini - Cinematographer, Philippe Brichetti - Production Manager, Patrice Ledoux - Producer, Alain Poiré - Producer, Bernard Bats - Sound/Sound Designer, Francois Groult - Sound/Sound Designer, Jean Gargonne - Sound Editor, Francis Veber - Screenwriter, Pascal Chauvin - Sound Effects Editor, Dominique Delguste - First Assistant Camera, Isabelle Perrin-Thevenet - Script Supervisor, Christophe Gachet - Second Assistant Director, Laurent Petrelli - Second Assistant Director, Dominique LeStrat - Still Photographer

Similar Movies

L'Associé; La Cage Aux Folles; Mama, There's a Man in Your Bed; Partners; The Ritz; Tootsie; Victor/Victoria; Withnail & I; The Gay Deceivers; The Birdcage; In & Out; Office Space; Three to Tango; Confusion of Genders; Friends and Family; Boat Trip; Pourquoi pas Moi?; Touch of Pink; My Wife Maurice; Don't Tell Her It's Me; Queens; The Valet
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Wikipedia: The Closet (2001 film)
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For the 2007 Chinese film of the same title, see The Closet.
The Closet (Le Placard)

US DVD cover
Directed by Francis Veber
Produced by Patrice Ledoux
Written by Francis Veber
Starring Daniel Auteuil
Gérard Depardieu
Music by Vladimir Cosma
Cinematography Luciano Tovoli
Editing by Georges Klotz
Distributed by Miramax Films
Release date(s) France:
17 January 2001
United States:
29 June 2001
Running time 84 minutes
Country France
Language French

The Closet (French: Le placard) is a 2001 French comedy film written and directed by Francis Veber. The screenplay focuses on a man whose life takes on surprisingly new dimensions when he pretends to be gay in order to keep his job.

Contents

Plot synopsis

François Pignon, an unassuming divorced man with a teenaged son who ignores him, quietly lives an unremarkable life. When he learns he is going to be fired from his job as an accountant in a rubber factory, he contemplates suicide, but his new neighbor Jean-Pierre Belone, a former industrial psychologist dissuades him from jumping from his balcony and suggests a way he might keep his position. He proposes he ignite the rumor he is homosexual by inserting his image in sexually provocative snapshots of a gay couple in a bar and anonymously mailing them to his boss. Given the factory's primary product is condoms, the gay community's support is essential, and his boss Mr. Kopel will be forced to keep Pignon on the payroll in order to be politically correct.

French DVD cover

Pignon does not change his usual mild and self-effacing behavior and mannerisms in any way as part of his masquerade, but because his supervisors and co-workers begin to regard him in a new light, seeing him as exotic rather than dull, his life becomes unexpectedly and dramatically better. Félix Santini, a homophobic co-worker who used to harass him, is warned he could be fired for discrimination if he continues to belittle Pignon, so he begins to make friendly overtures.

The company enters a float in a local gay pride parade, and Pignon is coerced into riding on it; his divorced wife and estranged son see him when the event is televised. The son is thrilled to learn his father, whom he always considered bland and boring, has a wilder side, and expresses an interest in spending more time with him. His suspicious ex-wife invites Pignon to dinner and demands an explanation. He has by this point gained enough self-confidence to tell her exactly what he thinks of her.

Meanwhile, Santini's charade of friendship has developed into an obsessive attraction; his wife suspects him of having an affair when she finds a receipt for an expensive pink cashmere sweater, and leaves him when he buys Pignon chocolates. After this, Santini invites Pignon to move in with him; when Pignon turns him down, Santini snaps, a fight ensues, and Santini is institutionalized to recover from his emotional breakdown.

Eventually, Pignon's ruse is discovered when Kopel catches him making love in the office to his co-worker, Mme. Bertrand. However, he has become so assertive he retains his position, relates to his son, patches up his relationship with Santini, cheers up Belone, and lives happily ever after.

Production

Exteriors were filmed in Chaville, Clamart, Suresnes, and central Paris. Interiors were shot in Studios Éclair in Epinay-sur-Seine.

Following its release in France, Belgium, and Switzerland, the film was shown at the French Film Festival in Australia, the Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, the Newport International Film Festival, and the Seattle International Film Festival before going into limited release in the US. It grossed $6,678,894 in the US and $43,425,851 in foreign markets for a worldwide box office of $50,104,745 [1].

Principal cast

Critical reception

Stephen Holden of the New York Times called it "giddy social comedy" and "a classic French farce" and added, "What's so liberating about The Closet is its refusal to walk on politically correct eggshells. The target of its blunt lusty humor is as much exaggerated political correctness and the panic it can engender as it is bigotry." [2]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times said, "The movie passes the time pleasantly and has a few good laughs ... But the screenplay relies too much on the first level of its premise and doesn't push into unexpected places. Once we get the setup, we can more or less anticipate the sitcom payoff, and there aren't the kinds of surprises, reversals and explosions of slapstick that made La Cage Aux Folles so funny. In the rating system of the Michelin Guide, it's worth a look, but not a detour or a journey." [3]

Peter Travers of Rolling Stone called the film "a bonbon spiked with mirth and malice" and noted, "Auteuil and Depardieu spar hilariously, and writer-director Francis Veber, following The Dinner Game, offers another delicious treat." [4]

Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly rated the film A-, calling it a "cagey, high gloss comedy" and a "perfectly built French tickler." [5]

Awards and nominations

Daniel Auteuil was named Best Actor at the Shanghai International Film Festival.

References

External links


 
 
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