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Delicatessen
Delicatessen

Delicatessen (1991)

73% User Rating
1h 39min
Comedy
Science Fiction
Fantasy

"A futuristic comic feast."

In a post-apocalyptic world, the residents of an apartment above the butcher shop receive an occasional delicacy of meat, something that is in low supply. A young man new in town falls in love with the butcher's daughter, which causes conflicts in her family, who need the young man for other business-related purposes.

Jean-Pierre JeunetDirector

Cast

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Dominique Pinon

Dominique Pinon

Louison

Marie-Laure Dougnac

Marie-Laure Dougnac

Julie Clapet

Jean-Claude Dreyfus

Jean-Claude Dreyfus

Clapet

Karin Viard

Karin Viard

Mademoiselle Plusse

Ticky Holgado

Ticky Holgado

Marcel Tapioca

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Pascal Benezech

Tried to Escape

The Movie Database

Edith Ker

Grandmother

Rufus

Rufus

Robert Kube

Jacques Mathou

Jacques Mathou

Roger Kube

Chick Ortega

Chick Ortega

Postman

Jean-François Perrier

Jean-François Perrier

Georges Interligator

Silvie Laguna

Silvie Laguna

Aurore Interligator

Howard Vernon

Howard Vernon

Frog Man

Dominique Zardi

Dominique Zardi

Taxi Driver

Anne-Marie Pisani

Anne-Marie Pisani

Madame Tapioca

Maurice Lamy

Maurice Lamy

Pank

Patrick Paroux

Patrick Paroux

Puk

Marc Caro

Marc Caro

Fox

Eric Averlant

Eric Averlant

Turner

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Dominique Betenfeld

Paumeau

Jean-Luc Caron

Jean-Luc Caron

Troglodists

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Bernard Flavien

Troglodists

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David Defever

Troglodists

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Raymond Forestier

Troglodists

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Robert Baud

Voltange

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Sylvain Plaine

Customer at the Butchery

Anthony Backman

Anthony Backman

Buano (uncredited)

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Nikky Smedley

Teri (uncredited)

Reviews (2)

All Reviews
Filipe Manuel Neto
Filipe Manuel Neto
Rating 40%

May 14, 2023

**French-style grotesque surrealism, in a film with style but no content.** I think I got to know Jean-Pierre Jeunet in the same way as almost everyone who doesn't follow French cinema at the same time: through the film “Amelie”. The film brought the director international and is unanimously considered his greatest and most relevant work. Given how much I liked this movie, I decided to see this one, but my experience was different. If “Amelie” was magical and beautiful, this film is much more uninteresting. It was treated like a surreal nightmare: it's a story about a butcher who occasionally sells human flesh in a dystopian future. Regardless of how much I felt disgusted by the aesthetics adopted in the film and by its bizarre theme, there is no doubt that it was a work with notes of quality: the degradation of buildings and the environment symbolizes or synthesizes the degradation of morals and values. The cacophony of sounds and images, between the dreamlike and the grotesque, is purposeful and intense (for example, that moment when the sound of bed springs where a couple makes love mixes with the sounds of a girl practicing the cello or from another neighbor who paints the ceiling of his apartment). The director's marks of talent, the quality we saw in “Amelie” is here, but distorted and adapted to a much less sympathetic film project. The film has good actors and the performance of each of them helps the film to become a little more palatable. Dominique Pinon stood out the most: he knows how to balance between seriousness and hilarity, and has a body and facial expressiveness that is remarkable. Jean Claude Dreyfus also deserves a positive note, while Marie-Laure Dougnac doesn't seem to me to have anything relevant to do other than appear ethereal, diaphanous as a mirage. Being a film that cares more about style than content, it also presents us with a very sharp and stylized cinematography: I must say that I admired the camera angles and the filming work, quite original, but that I don't particularly like the color, where an ocher tone made the film excessively brown. And despite the efforts, the soundtrack is one of those innocuous elements, which neither enhances nor harms the film because it does not deserve our attention in a relevant way.

Media

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Delicatessen - Trailer

Delicatessen - Trailer

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