- The Closet (2001 film)
:"For the 2007 Chinese film of the same title, see The Closet."
Infobox Film
name = The Closet (Le Placard)
image_size =
caption = US DVD cover
director =Francis Veber
producer =Patrice Ledoux
writer = Francis Veber
narrator =
starring =Daniel Auteuil Gérard Depardieu
music =Vladimir Cosma
cinematography =Luciano Tovoli
editing = Georges Klotz
distributor =Miramax Films
released =January 17 , 2001 FRAJune 29 , 2001 USA
runtime = 84 minutes
country =France
language = French
budget =
gross =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website =
amg_id =
imdb_id = 0243493"The Closet" (released in French-speaking countries as "Le Placard") is a 2001 French
comedy film written and directed byFrancis Veber . The screenplay focuses on an ordinary man whose life takes on surprisingly new dimensions when he pretends to begay in order to keep his job.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 contemplatessuicide , 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 iscondom s, the gay community's support is essential, and his boss Mr. Kopel will be forced to keep Pignon on the payroll in order to bepolitically correct .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. 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 centralParis . Exteriors were shot in Studios Éclair inEpinay-sur-Seine .Following its release in
France ,Belgium , andSwitzerland , the film was shown at the French Film Festival inAustralia , the Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, theNewport International Film Festival , and theSeattle 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 [ [https://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=closet.htm BoxOfficeMojo.com] ] .Principal cast
*
Daniel Auteuil ..... François Pignon
*Gérard Depardieu ..... Félix Santini
*Michel Aumont ..... Jean-Pierre Belone
*Michèle Laroque ..... Miss Bertrand
*Thierry Lhermitte ..... Guillaume
*Jean Rochefort ..... Kopel
*Alexandra Vandernoot ..... ChristineCritical 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." [ [http://www.nytimes.com/2001/06/29/arts/29CLOS.html "New York Times", June 29, 2001] ]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 ofslapstick that made "La Cage Aux Folles " so funny. In the rating system of theMichelin Guide , it's worth a look, but not a detour or a journey." [ [http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20010706/REVIEWS/107060301/1023 "Chicago Sun-Times", July 6, 2001] ]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." [ [http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/movie/5949337/review/5949338/the_closet "Rolling Stone", July 19, 2001] ]Lisa Schwarzbaum of "
Entertainment Weekly " rated the film A-, calling it a "cagey, high gloss comedy" and a "perfectly built French tickler." [ [http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,167252,00.html "Entertainment Weekly", July 11, 2001] ]Awards and nominations
Daniel Auteuil was named Best Actor at the
Shanghai International Film Festival .References
reflist
External links
*imdb title|id=0243493|title=The Closet
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.