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Delicatessen

Dominique Pinon , Marie-Laure Dougnac , Marc Caro Jean Pierre Jeunet    Universal, suitable for all   DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)
Price: £7.99
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Product details

  • Actors: Dominique Pinon, Marie-Laure Dougnac
  • Directors: Marc Caro Jean Pierre Jeunet
  • Format: PAL, Widescreen, Colour
  • Language: Italian, French, Spanish, German
  • Subtitles: Italian, English, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: U
  • Studio: Universal Pictures
  • Run Time: 95.00 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (53 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B003Z7QTJG
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 347,746 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

In un fatiscente edificio, tra stravaganti condomini - i fratelli Robert e Roger Kube dediti a fabbricare curiosi souvenir, l'isterica Aurore, la vogliosa Plusse, la famiglia Tapioca, i cui componenti (padre, madre, figli e nonna) sono sempre affamati, lo stralunato Potin, dedito all'allevamento di rane e lumache - vive la giovane violoncellista Julie con suo padre, il macellaio Clapet, un folle individuo intento ad accumulare mais e lenticchie avuti dai suoi clienti in baratto di carne umana. Vittima predestinata del macellaio è il candido Louison, un clown disoccupato che ha chiesto a questi vitto ed alloggio in cambio di lavori di pulizia e manutenzione. Julie, innamoratasi di Louison, per salvarlo dal suo triste destino, trova aiuto in misteriosi trogloditi vegetariani, una genia di teppisti che vivono nel sottosuolo metropolitano, i quali sperano così di impossessarsi dei legumi del macellaio. Dopo curiosi e grotteschi avvenimenti, questi muore involontariamente di sua stessa mano, dopo aver lanciato un boomerang tagliente contro Louison.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
26 of 26 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars C'est magnifique. Surreal and so unreal.... 10 Oct 2003
By Brian G
Format:DVD
On its release, this French film caused much interest and praise due to its freshness and vitality. The joint debut of directors Marc Caro and Jean-Pierre Jeunet has distinctive visual style, a surreal yet clever plot, hilarious comic pieces and comedy timing making it a delightful, colourful, imaginative film of many surprises that refuses to become classified within any genre. You want the plot? You sure? Some time in the future, society has begun to collapse. A circus performer, Louison, gratefully takes a room in an apartment block owned by butcher Clapet as it’s advertised as being rent free in return for odd jobs. He encounters the building’s offbeat tenants such as the toy making Cube brothers, Aurore Interligator - who hears voices urging her to commit suicide and Mr Potin who lives in a water filled room filled with frogs and snails which he dines upon. The offer of free rent is just a trick to lure people who Clapet then butchers and sells off as meat to the other tenants. However, his shy daughter Julie falls in love with Louison and decides to save him - something that requires her to make a deal with the Trogolodists, the vegetarian terrorists that live in the sewers. Did I mention surreal? OK, so there’s the ‘plot’. For me, the beauty and magic of ‘Delicatessen’ is to just sit back, watch and enjoy the unexpected and hilarious pleasures unfold. An inventive film experience - an adventure, a comedy and a sheer joy to savour as it sparkles with originality.

The special extras are real bonus features that add so much to the collectability of this little gem. The movie itself is in French or German, Italian or Spanish Audio Dialogue with choices of English, German, Dutch, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish Subtitles.... Read more ›

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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Fabulously weird black comedy 25 Mar 2002
By A Customer
Format:DVD
This film is a must for those who like the weird humour of Amelie. But before I mislead you the style and black humour are the only links between this and Amelie. The film is set in a post-nucleur holocaust France, where meat is in short supply.
The response of the local buthcher shop is to provide a meat supply from the nearby changing clientele of a guest house (I'm not giving anything away here as the cover has a human head on a plate!!!) As I said black humour! The plot revolves around Dominque Pinon (Also In Amelie) as a new arrival to the guest house...
The butchers daughter falls in love with him causing an exciting, funny turn of events, exemplified by the a vigilante vegetarian group!
The film is a magnificent montage of different filming techniques, the use of colour and sound to convey the strangeness of the time.
Simply put it is brilliant, funny and a great way to spend an evening- even if it does put you off meat for a while!!!!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A veritable feast 20 Feb 2005
Format:DVD
A macabre little fantasia from Jean-Pierre Jeunet (who would go on to make "Amelie" and "A very long engagement"). He uses a simple plot device. Let this be a France which has succumbed to some dystopian nightmare, which has slipped into a condition of economic collapse where there is no food ... and the currency has dissolved, leaving barter the only form of exchange. This is a world where a bag of lentils will take you places. Now, take a dingy, dank tenement block, set on its own ... maybe some distance beyond the outskirts of town ... maybe not. Fill its rooms with an oddball bunch of tenants. Let the tenement belong to a psychotic butcher, who remains in business by harvesting the handymen he lures into the spare apartment. Now, let's complicate the action: let the latest handyman be some scrawny little bloke, a former circus performer, and let the butcher's daughter fall for him ... and enlist the aid of the underground to try to protect him from her father's meat cleaver.

Like I say, a simple little plot device. It works beautifully. 'Delicatessen' is quite a remarkable little film. Shot on a low budget, it is exemplary for anyone wanting to make movies: it helps if you have talent as a director and can enlist a highly competent crew of technicians and professionals; you will need an excellent script; and a superb cast won't go amiss.

It's a lovely script. The test of a good story is how quickly you suspend disbelief. You are riveted from the opening shots. You absorb the notion that this is a world with no currency and little food, where, frankly, anything is possible. You settle to enjoy the film. And your attention is held by the cast....

And the humour is beautifully choreographed - watch the scenes with the bedsprings!

Jeunet's world of 'Delicatessen' is an extravagant fantasia. He never explains what has gone wrong in the world. Life goes on. Two brothers earn an incongruous living making those annoying toys that moo like a cow! One voluptuous tenant works at the oldest profession. Another devises foolproof means to kill herself. Our hero, the new handyman, plays the saw and dreams of happy days as a circus clown. Everyone watches TV. It seems that the only industry to have survived is the entertainment industry ... or, at least, the slapstick side of it.

It's an ironic take on French culture. French cuisine has become cannibalism - doubtless the tenants know how to make a boudin or pâté out of human remains. At least one of the tenants maintains tradition, though - he breeds snails and frogs in his flooded apartment.

But who are the underground, the troglodytes who inhabit the sewers and who are portrayed as bringing down society? The reality is that this is not a film with a hidden message or cryptic critique of French society. It's not a film in which you search for meaning. Jeunet offers fantasy - quirky, droll, surreal, but fantasy. The fantasy exists not to elaborate some political message, but to sustain the story. It's a plot device - the fantasy provides the vehicle for the story of love and butchery. It makes the inexplicable explicable.

A fine, funny movie with a superb ensemble cast and great direction. A film to savour ... and to speculate on how much it influenced the 'League of Gentlemen'. Read more ›

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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully sick 16 April 2006
Format:DVD
This is a lovely, sick comedy set in post-apocalyptic France, where a butcher satisfies his customers' demands for meat, which is in short supply, by killing and butchering innocent people (including some of his lodgers.) The dramatic events of the film centre around the fact that the butcher's daughter has fallen in love with one of her father's prospective victims. This atmospherically shot film has a real intelligent, dark wit and is great fun to watch.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Meat the neighbours! 19 Oct 2004
By A. Skudder VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
In a post-apocalyptic world, while the Australians (in Mad Max) are more concerned with petrol and V8s, and the Americans are making sure the mail gets through (The Postman), the French will, of course, be more concerned with food. Delicatessen never hints at what has brought society down, but is centred on an apartment block owned by the butcher whos shop is on the ground floor. In some ways the building is one of the real stars of the film, with its network of pipes and tubes which are used by the various inhabitants to eavesdrop on or communicate with their neighbours.

Jean-Claude Dreyfus is perfect as the butcher and dominates every scene he is in, and the rest of the main cast fill their roles admirably, although the members of the underground resistance (the Troglodistes) never get beyond a second dimension.

When this film is funny it is absolutely hilarious. At other times it is just amazingly surreal, and is never less than watchable, right from the very beginning which is a title sequence David Fincher would be proud of. Really. The title sequence is worth seeing just on its own.

Special mention has to go to the menus on the DVD, which are beautiful. Some of the options are difficult to read unless you get closer to the screen, but nevertheless these are some of the best menus I have ever seen.

I have a small quibble with some of the translation for the sub-titles, which are sometimes a bit literal rather than looking for the suitable colloquial English, (For example: using the word 'shawl' for a man's scarf jars a little bit) but generally the sub-titles are easy to follow and not too intrusive.

This is one successful French film which is unlikely to be given the big-budget Hollywood treatment, so don't wait for the big-name remake: just watch this one now!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Black comedy at its finest
Delicatessen is a French film directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet, who is best known for his work on Amelie, France's highest grossing film. Read more
Published 12 days ago by Laura Hartley
5.0 out of 5 stars Cannibalism without the gore
A dark comedy worth taking the time to savour. Along with the main tale there are the little side-stories of the characters living in the various apartments which all intertwine in... Read more
Published 26 days ago by Strychnos
3.0 out of 5 stars dvd
This replaced a vidio of the same name and I have not to date 27/3 watched it in this form.
Published 2 months ago by the turk
5.0 out of 5 stars I invite you for dinner.
This is french cinema at its finest, there are so many genres going on at once that this film could have been a complete mess, however it is a masterpiece. Read more
Published 4 months ago by stephj
3.0 out of 5 stars N'est pas vegetarien !
Quirky, brilliantly filmed, interesting, often comical, well acted, loved the sets.
Dark, macabre, grotesque, often a bit sickening (if you think about it), over-extended... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Jack Oswald
5.0 out of 5 stars Great DVD
I ordered this DVD and it arrived before the delivery date and in great condition. The sound quality is excellent and it is a trip back in time for me. Read more
Published 7 months ago by rosieposie
5.0 out of 5 stars `Delicatessen' is 100% magic cinematic.
In a battered French street in what looks like the aftermath of an apocalyptic past, present or future, Louison (Dominique Pinon) is looking for a job. Read more
Published 16 months ago by dipesh parmar
3.0 out of 5 stars Delicatessen
Christmas present, found on someones wish list so I guess you can't go wrong... I think it is a French subtitled DVD but again as it hasn't been opened yet, we don't know how it... Read more
Published 18 months ago by Julie
4.0 out of 5 stars I'm a butcher, but I don't mince words"
Take the surrealist `sixties British comedy The Bed Sitting Room, blend it with elements of Sweeney Todd and if you have enough French humour to add into the mix then you may come... Read more
Published 19 months ago by @GeekZilla9000
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant!!!!!!!!!!! What a refreshing film
This film is original, so funny, dark and twisted, and highly imaginative. So many special little bits in it and also an excellent soundtrack. Read more
Published 22 months ago by Bella Von Bluebell
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