Delicatessen (1991)
BDRip 1080p | MKV | 1920x1036 | HEVC @ 5371 Kbps | 99 min | 3,89 Gb
Audio: Français AAC 2.0 @ 175 Kbps | Subs: English (film+commentary track), German, Español, Dansk, Nederlands, Suomi, Japanese (日本語), Svenska, Norsk
Genre: Art-house, Fantasy
BDRip 1080p | MKV | 1920x1036 | HEVC @ 5371 Kbps | 99 min | 3,89 Gb
Audio: Français AAC 2.0 @ 175 Kbps | Subs: English (film+commentary track), German, Español, Dansk, Nederlands, Suomi, Japanese (日本語), Svenska, Norsk
Genre: Art-house, Fantasy
Directors: Marc Caro, Jean-Pierre Jeunet
Writers: Jean-Pierre Jeunet (screenplay), Marc Caro (screenplay)
Stars: Marie-Laure Dougnac, Dominique Pinon, Pascal Benezech
Clapet (Jean-Claude Dreyfus) is a butcher who owns a run-down apartment building in post-apocalyptic France. The building is in constant need of a handyman, because Clapet routinely butchers them and sells them as food. The latest in the long ling of disposable workers is Louison (Dominique Pinon), a former circus clown desperate for work and lodging. But this time Clapet's plan hits a snag when his young daughter (Marie-Laure Dougnac) falls head over heels for the lovable Louison.
IMDB - 15 wins
If Citizen Kane is the number one movie to see to learn anything about cinematography, this might as well be at number 2.
Delicatessen succeeds at creating a totally separate, consistent and believable universe with a very distinct atmosphere. The brown and green colors add to the weirdness of this universe.
Is it horror? Yes and no. Is it a comedy? Yes and no. Is it brilliant? Oh yes!
Everybody involved in the making of this picture gave it its best. The camera work is brilliant, the sets are simply amazing (with the final bathroom scene at the pinnacle), the editing and pace is breathtaking.
This could have been a very dark movie (and I guess a few Hollywood directors would have tried to turn it into a splatter movie and fail miserably), but the humor is just light, off-beat and hilarious enough to make it into a consistent and bearable whole. Every universe has its humor, and a strange universe has strange humor. Jacques Tati would have loved Delicatessen.
Julie's 'tea ceremony' without her glasses, the mattress spring test, Aurore's failing suicide contraptions, it's all funny as hell. I hope everyone who is even marginally involved in making movies gets to see Delicatessen and learns from its greatness. We could sure use a touch of genius in most of them …
10/10
(click to enlarge)
Audio Commentary by Director Jean-Pierre Jeunet
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