IMDb RATING
5.8/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
The titular gay couple become involved with local cops and foreign spies when one of them unwittingly obtains a roll of stolen microfilm.The titular gay couple become involved with local cops and foreign spies when one of them unwittingly obtains a roll of stolen microfilm.The titular gay couple become involved with local cops and foreign spies when one of them unwittingly obtains a roll of stolen microfilm.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Nello Pazzafini
- Mangin
- (as Giovanni Pazzafini)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRenato's son - Laurent, whom had a prominent role in the first part, is only briefly mentioned and not featured at all.
- GoofsAlbin's mysterious voyeur gets shot in the neck, from the balcony that's placed closely beneath him, whilst Albin himself upholds a straight face-to-face contact with him the whole time and somehow, still remains oblivious to the fact shortly after it happened.
Featured review
I am not purposely skipped the first installment, just by coincidence, I could only found the sequel right now, soothingly enough, the omission itself does not spoil the fun of this French slapstick comedy made more than 30 years ago.
How many times one could laugh out loud watching a gay/transvestite film from beginning till the very end? What's more precious is without being tainted by vulgar gags sand abominable antics (especially immune of sex-relating perversions or individual sex- orientation humiliations).
Plot-wise, although devoid of certain logistics, everything serves up to the middle-age crisis in this gay-relationship, particularly the deterioration of Zaza Napoli's self-confidence (a remarkable performance from the late Michel Serrault), which wisely puts audience into a heartfelt milieu whereas the entire "mini-film case" merely functions as a backdrop, there is no worries about our protagonists' personal security, the only gory murder is underplayed by a poison-dart.
The odd-couple route stews in a series of set pieces which strive on the verge of platitude, yet the acting, literally Michel Serrault, does single-handedly overturns the unfavorable condition, also who could forget Benny Luke's transvestite black servant (who changes his dresses in each scene), whilst in the latter returning-to-Italy part, the contradiction is pure simple but effective, which leavens the situation into a more culturally universal understanding. Enrico Morricone's score also is a big selling-point for the film
Overall, this super-optimistic farce (I suppose it includes the entire series, there are three films in all) could easily outshines among myriads of melodramatic-sentimental gay genre films even they were made several dozens of years ahead.
How many times one could laugh out loud watching a gay/transvestite film from beginning till the very end? What's more precious is without being tainted by vulgar gags sand abominable antics (especially immune of sex-relating perversions or individual sex- orientation humiliations).
Plot-wise, although devoid of certain logistics, everything serves up to the middle-age crisis in this gay-relationship, particularly the deterioration of Zaza Napoli's self-confidence (a remarkable performance from the late Michel Serrault), which wisely puts audience into a heartfelt milieu whereas the entire "mini-film case" merely functions as a backdrop, there is no worries about our protagonists' personal security, the only gory murder is underplayed by a poison-dart.
The odd-couple route stews in a series of set pieces which strive on the verge of platitude, yet the acting, literally Michel Serrault, does single-handedly overturns the unfavorable condition, also who could forget Benny Luke's transvestite black servant (who changes his dresses in each scene), whilst in the latter returning-to-Italy part, the contradiction is pure simple but effective, which leavens the situation into a more culturally universal understanding. Enrico Morricone's score also is a big selling-point for the film
Overall, this super-optimistic farce (I suppose it includes the entire series, there are three films in all) could easily outshines among myriads of melodramatic-sentimental gay genre films even they were made several dozens of years ahead.
- lasttimeisaw
- Jul 22, 2011
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Birds of a Feather 2
- Filming locations
- Via Marcello Malpighi 9, Rome, Lazio, Italy(Hotel Des Lys)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $6,950,125
- Gross worldwide
- $6,950,125
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was La Cage aux Folles II (1980) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer