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La Méthode Bourchnikov (2007)
Character: Roman Goübrick (voice)
The unthinkable has finally happened, and a TV crew will be there to witness the event: Alexandre Goübrick, son of legendary filmmaker Roman Goübrick, has decided, twenty-five years after his father's mysterious disappearance, to complete the famous director's ultimate masterpiece. Alexandre sets out to find his father's old crew, and desperately tries to find the film's missing piece: the last shot.
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Spiral (2018)
Character: Self (archive footage)
A look at the rise of anti-Semitism and assaults against Jews in present-day France.
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Sans forme de politesse : Regard sur la mouvance Dieudonné (2009)
Character: Self
Dieudonné admits it himself: he played "the fool," which hasn't stopped him from becoming the symbol of an entire generation born of decolonization, to the point of embarking on electoral adventures. Like Coluche, he is the "man to beat" for all the right-thinking media. Are his sulfurous reputation and provocative humor alone responsible for his popularity?
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Enquête sur le réseau Dieudonné (2014)
Character: Self (archive footage)
A star comedian of the 90s, Dieudonné has become, within a decade, a "devil of the Republic." An anti-establishment hero to some, a dangerous militant to others, the man himself speaks of a conspiracy aimed at making him disappear.
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Astérix & Obélix : Mission Cléopâtre (2002)
Character: Caius Céplus
History's favorite Gauls assist Queen Cleopatra when she wagers that the Egyptian people can build a palace for Julius Caesar in just three months.
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Les 11 commandements (2004)
Character: Dieu
After an evening of drinking, six men find themselves in front of The God of the Joke. Distressed to find that people aren't laughing anymore, He gives the six friends a mission: to save the world with the Eleven Commandments of the Joke. The men enthusiastically take on their task. They undertake various tests aimed at pushing the limits of stupidity.
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Le Déménagement (1997)
Character: Sam
Qui n'a pas connu le stress d'un déménagement ? Surtout quand on est un jeune écrivain comme Alain, sur le point de quitter une bonne maison d'édition pour écrire un sitcom pour la télévision, que sa femme est sur le point d'accoucher et de surcroît quand les déménageurs sont des Roumains qui travaillent au noir et qu'ils n'ont pas vraiment le sens de la ponctualité...
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Dieudonné - J’ai fait l’con (2009)
Character: Self
At the start of his show, Dieudonné talks about the event that, according to him, made the media start talking about him again, the baptism of his daughter Plume, whose godfather is Jean-Marie Le Pen. Dieudonné acted like an idiot, and he explains himself with his trademark biting humor.
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Le Clone (1998)
Character: Leo
Thomas is a computer whiz working on a program aimed at curing timidity. The program's host, Leo, is Thomas' alter ego. One night, he decides to see the world for himself and takes over the body of Patrice, the houseworker.
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Dieudonné - 1905 (2006)
Character: Self
Dieudonné celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Law on the Separation of Church and State, which was intended to dissolve sectarianism and lead the Republic toward universalism, only to observe its failure... while attempting to analyze the reasons why with humor.
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Les Clefs de bagnole (2003)
Character: Actor who refuses to film with Laurent
Who would think losing car keys could lead us that far ? Be careful, adventure is on every street corner...
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Jamel Show (1999)
Character: Self
Jamel is given carte blanche at CANAL+ for an hour, the comedian took this opportinity to gather friends and guests for a comedy special to celebrate the end of the millennium.
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Voyance et manigance (2001)
Character: Alban
Chantel is happy: her son's away at school playing soccer, she and her husband get along, her neighbor Agnès is her best friend, and her job at a government office is easy. When her husband is laid off and she wonders for how long, her office pal Jackie recommends Alban, a psychic (and compulsive gambler), who promptly tells Chantel of a curse on her that will take three sessions (and 10,000 FF) to dispel. Through happenstance, she meets Alban's half-brother; thinking she is following the psychic predictions, she tries to start an affair with him. She also undergoes Alban's exorcism, and soon, terrible things indeed start to happen. Is there any way out of her misery?
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Dieudonné - Le Divorce de Patrick (2003)
Character: Self
Dieudonné receives his friend Patrick. The latter is in the midst of a depression following his divorce from his wife Sandrine. Dieudonné then comes to talk about couples' problems, romantic encounters, the effects of several years of married life, the role of a parent, children in the midst of divorce. In the course of his development, he even comes to the subject of war, religions, the attacks of September 11. In short, a whole program!
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Zouk, Mariage et Ouélélé (2002)
Character: Nestor
In Julius Amédée-Laou's biting dramedy, a supposedly joyful interracial wedding descends into chaos when long-buried prejudices and family secrets rise to the surface. Told through the cocky lens of the bride's younger brother, what begins as a lighthearted summer affair turns nightmarish as scandal threatens to destroy the unlikely couple's big day.
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HS : Hors service (2001)
Character: Marchand
Ils sont cinq tueurs. Francis, le chef, Louis le parano, Victor, l'accro aux series tele, M'sieur, fan de tamagochi et Marchand, dont la femme est la seule certitude. Elle le croit representant en chaussures. Jusqu'au jour ou elle decouvre la verite. Une discussion plus qu'orageuse suit, au cours de laquelle il lui balance un coup de poing d'une telle force qu'elle tombe dans le coma. Marchand est effondre. Il acquiert la conviction que, s'il se rachete, elle se reveillera. Il decide non seulement de raccrocher mais encore de sauver ses hypothetiques victimes.
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Dieudonné - Mahmoud (2011)
Character: Self
Dieudonné returns with "Mahmoud", in what can be described as "a contemporary artistic testimony with a strong humorous content." He tells us about the incredible events that led him to meet the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He takes us back in time and transports us to the 16th century on a plantation in Martinique to discuss the courteous relationships between masters and their slaves. He also talks about the all-powerful and revered field of medicine... only to mock it, of course. And it feels good!
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Chats perchés (2006)
Character: Self - demonstration (archive footage)
Chris Marker’s The Case of the Grinning Cat (Chats perchés) follows the appearance of the yellow M. Chat graffiti across Paris in the early 2000s, using it as a lens to reflect on art, protest, and politics in the post-9/11 era. Blending street imagery with footage of global and local unrest, the film serves as a playful yet pointed companion to Marker’s earlier A Grin Without a Cat.
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Le derrière (1999)
Character: Francis
Frédérique's mother has died recently leaving her the family stud farm. She's never met her father, doesn't even know his name. But she finds it on the back of an old photo. She sets off for Paris. She stays with her gay dancer pal Marc. Marc and friends decide to go to their favourite gay bar... but it's men only. So Frédérique becomes Frédéric, an effeminate gay boy... Frédérique follows her father. Pierre Arroux is an art curator - and gay. She introduces herself to him, but as Frédéric. So while Frédéric is quite an awkward young man and an embarrassment to his father, Frédérique is secretly meeting with her old boyfriend now living in Paris..
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Vive nous! (2000)
Character: Bruno
When Valérie's husband Yves confesses he's in love with another woman, she happens into a judo club and begins lessons. She likes it, she's a natural, and she's attracted to Bruno, the quiet instructor. He likes her as well, but sees social class as a barrier, and Yves never seems to be too far away. Valérie's two close friends have their own stories: Annette is continuously looking for a husband, with little luck. Clara cares more about wealth and power, and takes up with the country's finance minister, an older man who flips for her. Meanwhile, Yves's lover doesn't seem in a hurry to leave her husband, so Valérie looks good to him from time to time. Will Bruno ever make a move?
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L'Antisémite (2012)
Character: The anti-Semite / Dieudo
A woman suffering from cancer, seeing herself dying, asks her husband to consult a jew psychiatrist in order to get his anti semitism treated. The meeting between these two figures will give place to a kind of comic situation.
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Dieudonné - Sandrine (2009)
Character: Self
Patrick and Sandrine Boulard have been separated for several years now. Patrick cannot get over the breakup and breaks into his ex-wife's house one night. She files a complaint. The trial begins. After leading the public to believe that the show had been canceled, on the pretext that he had lost his "license to make people laugh," Dieudonné explains his weariness with controversy and his decision to choose a lighter subject. He thus reprises the character of Patrick, drawn from Patrick's divorce, and has the judge, the lawyers, and Patrick himself speak during the trial. This is followed by a series of sketches dealing, as a whole, with the relationship between men and women.
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Métastases (2012)
Character: Self
This is the story of two men confronted with the ordeal of cancer. Each approaches the illness in a very different way. One, Bruno, submits religiously to mainstream medicine by accepting chemotherapy. The other, Olivier, encouraged by his friend Dieudo, travels to Africa to be treated by a healer. This film pits two approaches to medicine against each other through the lens of satire.
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Dieudonné - Best Of (2007)
Character: Self
Dieudonné looks back on his 10-year solo career... In an original staging, he reviews all the hilarious characters that have made him the most prolific comedian of his generation.
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Dieudonné - Tout seul (1998)
Character: Self
Following a tragic news event, Dieudonné portrays a dozen characters who, in turn, give their version of the story.
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Dieudonné - Pardon Judas ! (2000)
Character: Self
After his betrayal, Judas did not go hang himself, but instead embarked on a 2000-year wandering, carrying the weight of infamy (his betrayal of Jesus), before reappearing in the midst of the Algerian desert.
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Carnets 88 (2019)
Character: Self
Ten notebooks depict an immersion in French neo-fascist circles during the 2010s.
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Didier (1997)
Character: Commentateur sportif, Jean
Jean-Pierre Costa is a football manager upon whom fate appears not to be smiling. First, a friend, Annabelle, dumps a pet Labrador named Didier on him whilst she goes off to make a report in Los Angeles. Next, one of his star players is injured, leaving him one player short for a crucial match. As if things could not get any worse, Costa wakes up one morning to find that that Didier has been transformed into a man...
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Dieudonné - Dépôt de bilan (2008)
Character: Self
The comedian, through a gallery of quirky and offbeat characters, paints a biting portrait of our society. Dieudonné tackles bankruptcies in all their forms: social, historical, animal...
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Dieudonné - Mes excuses (2005)
Character: Self
After being the target of a media lynching, Dieudonné makes a comeback and explains himself on stage in this already iconic show.
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Casablanca Driver (2004)
Character: Bob Wise, l'entraîneur
This mockumentary follows the world's worst boxer and the events that led to his meteoric rise in the year 1969.
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Dieudonné - Rendez-nous Jésus ! (2012)
Character: Self
Dieudonné, father of little Judas, talks to us about Jesus. What could be more natural! After all, Dieudo grew up in the light of Christ and, like a mirror, reflects his personal vision of Jesus back to us. A Jesus who is both the Son of God for Christians and also a prophet of Islam, foretelling the arrival of his messenger, Muhammad. For Dieudonné, Christians and Muslims share a common destiny: to laugh together, and to do so heartily!
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Dieudonné - Cocorico ! (2002)
Character: Self
From politics to politicians, from the media to the justice system, from your neighbor to even himself, Dieudonné really targets everyone in an uncompromising portrait of our society, tinted with vitriol.
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