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The Visitors: Bastille Day | |
---|---|
Les Visiteurs: La Révolution | |
Directed by | Jean-Marie Poiré |
Written by | Jean-Marie Poiré Christian Clavier |
Produced by | Christian Clavier Sidonie Dumas Jean-Marie Poiré |
Starring | Christian Clavier Jean Reno Franck Dubosc Karin Viard Sylvie Testud Marie-Anne Chazel Ary Abittan Alex Lutz |
Cinematography | Stéphane Le Parc |
Edited by | Philippe Bourgueil |
Music by | Eric Lévi |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Gaumont |
Release date |
|
Running time | 110 minutes |
Countries | France Belgium Czech Republic |
Language | French |
Budget | $27 million[1] |
Box office | $18.6 million[2] |
The Visitors: Bastille Day (original title: Les Visiteurs: La Révolution) is a 2016 French-Belgian-Czech comedy film directed by Jean-Marie Poiré.
It is the third film in the trilogy Les Visiteurs, following The Visitors II: The Corridors of Time released eighteen years earlier in 1998. The first film in the series was released twenty-three years earlier in 1993.
The film was produced by Sidonie Dumas (Gaumont), Sylvain Goldberg and Serge de Poucques (Nexus Factory), Christian Clavier (Ouille Productions) and Jean-Marie Poiré. Both Poiré and Clavier co-wrote the script, as was also the case for the two previous films.
Only three actors from the two previous films appear in this third one: Christian Clavier, Jean Reno and Marie-Anne Chazel. Of those three actors, only Reno and Clavier play the same characters that they played in the previous films, namely the medieval knight Godefroy de Montmirail and his squire Jacquouille la Fripouille. They are accompanied by new protagonists played by Franck Dubosc, Karin Viard, Sylvie Testud, Ary Abittan, Alex Lutz and Pascal N'Zonzi.
Filmed from April to June 2015 in the Czech Republic and Belgium, the film is, after the remake Just Visiting (2001), the second film in the franchise not to have been filmed in France. It also marked the return of Jean-Marie Poiré to film directing after a long break of almost fourteen years. The Visitors: Bastille Day was a critical and commercial failure in France.[3]