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Marco Ferreri’s decadent and depraved masterpiece follows four friends (Marcello Mastroianni, Michel Piccoli, Philippe Noiret and Ugo Tognazzi) as they hole up in a Parisian villa with three prostitutes and a local schoolteacher (Andréa Ferréol) to eat themselves to death.
DVD EXTRA: Excerpt from the documentary “Marco Ferreri: The Director Who Came from the Future”
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
One of the most provocative movies of all times,
By
This review is from: La Grande Bouffe (DVD)
I like this movie for its outrageousness and its ability to combine an allegoric vision and a creeping reality: what are we doing with our lives? Where will this boredom of modern living lead us to? The idea of four friends engaging in an all-out "Grande Abbufatta" (the original title in Italian) is quite a perceptive allegory of what happened to the so-called Western civilization as a whole. It seems it has nowhere to go but to a formidable blow-out since its very beginning... I'm not a big fan of Marco Ferreri's work. I think he was quite irregular in his output, but when he hit the mark he was simply second to none. For me, this "La Grande Bouffe" and "L'Ape Regina" ("The Queen Bee" or "The Conjugal Bed", 1963, with Ugo Tognazzi and Marina Vlady) are among the best examples of black comedy ever to be given us by filmmakers anywhere in the world. His choice of actors couldn't be better: Mastroianni, Piccoli, Noiret and Tognazzi will be forever among the greatest in this trade, and in "La Grande Bouffe" all of them give us one of the finest of their efforts ever. I was very happy when I knew this movie was being released on DVD because I had seen it twice in movie theaters: in 1978 (the Italian-spoken version) and in 1981 (the French-spoken version, the one on this DVD). I was hoping the DVD version would bring both. I was quite disappointed to see that it brings only the French-spoken version, with English subtitles. It would have added much more to my pleasure if this DVD version of "La Grande Bouffe" would come with both Italian- and French-spoken versions, and also with Italian and French - besides English - subtitles. If I'm not mistaken, it's possible to do this with any DVD (if not, please correct me), for I have many DVDs at home with a choice of several languages on the audio tracks and an equally wide variety of subtitles' choice. Also, the music that Philippe Sarde wrote for this movie has haunted me since the very first time I saw "La Grande Bouffe". I have been hunting for this movie's music all over the world to no avail for decades now (can anyone out there help me on that? Was this music ever issued on tapes, LPs or CDs anywhere?). I was hoping that on DVD they would provide us also with a choice of hearing this sensuous and intriguing music without the dialogues, but this too was denied to us viewers. For these two reasons only (lack of a wider choice of languages and subtitles, and lack of a separate track for the music) I don't give this DVD a 5-star rating.
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
There can be only one.,
By The Chalcenteric Kid (Boca Raton) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: La Grande Bouffe (DVD)
Some movies sear an image into your brain for ever. Like the end of "The Wild Bunch" or the beginning of Leone's "Once Upon A Time In The West" - "Looks like we're shy one horse". "No, you brought two too many".I saw "La Grand Bouffe" over 20 years ago. I still have the image in my mind of the guy eating the two blancmanges at the end of the picture before he dies. This movie is surreal, bizarre and wonderful. If we go to movies to see images and things we have never seen before, then this movie is spectacularly successful. There is no greater movie about food and death.
19 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What a way to go,
By A Customer
This review is from: La Grande Bouffe [VHS] (VHS Tape)
La Grande Bouffe has to be one of a few greatest existential movies ever successfully produced (along with Goddard's Weekend and Bunel's Une Chien Andalou). When life's grudgery and drudgery become too much for a bunch of middle-class men facing middle-age and mortality, the question arises, why am I getting old? Why is this happenig to me? The inevitable is not acceptable and each man looks to what it is that would make them happy. Ultimately they realize nothing will make them happy. It is all so ordinary and mundane, their life has no meaning.Retiring to a grand maison with a courtyard and pond in a section of town they endeavour to reflect on their unfulfilled lives and satisfy every lustful desire they have. One last grand blow-out and then exit with dignity at the peak of you outward persona. The movie turns into a food filled bacchanal with brioches filled with pate the size of the corronation cake in the Great Race. As with all great gourmonds these not so gentlemen dispatch all sorts of animals and fish stocked around the courtyard and in the pond, ensuring freshness of meat for the "die"ning table. There is a bit of gratuitous sex, it was the early seventies and this was a foreign production. Additionally the sex is an adjunct to the other deadly sins that they were endulging in, on their way out.
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