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JUST VISITING
Rating:
USA/France. 2001.
Director Jean-Marie Gaubert [Poire], Screenplay Christian Clavier, John Hughes & Jean-Marie Poire, Based on the Film Les Visiteurs Written by Christian Clavier & Jean-Marie Poire, Producers Patrice LeDoux & Ricardo Mestres, Photography Ueli Steigler, Music John Powell, Visual Effects Supervisor Igor Sekulic, Visual Effects Visual Factory, Special Effects Supervisors Nick Allder & Ron Bolanowski, Prosthetic Effects/Makeup Jean-Marie Gaubert & Igor Sekluic, Production Design Doug Kraner. Production Company Gaumont/Hollywood Pictures.
Cast:
Jean Reno (Count Thibault VI), Christina Applegate (Julia Malfete/Lady Rosalind), Christian Clavier (Andre), Matthew Ross (Hunter Cassidy), Malcolm McDowell (The Wizard), Bridgette Wilson-Sampas (Amber), Tara Reid (Angelique), Robert Glenister (Earl of Warwick), John Aylward (Byron), Valerie Griffiths (Hag)
Plot: French nobleman Count Thibault VI is about to marry the Lady Rosalind, a cousin of the King of England. But a rival for Rosalinds affections has a witch poison Thibaults wine, causing him to see fearsome apparitions and stab Rosalind. He is sentenced to be beheaded but his bumbling servant Andre brings a wizard to his cell who gives them both a potion that will send them back in time to just before he stabbed her and prevent it from happening. But the wizard accidentally leaves out one ingredient and they are instead transported through time to present-day Chicago. They wake up in a museum where Thibaults modern-day descendant Julia Malfete works as an historian. They are bewildered by modern technology, although not as much as the 21st Century has difficulty adjusting to their less sophisticated ways.
Just Visiting is one of a whole series of American films which are (invariably inferior) remakes of French hits. This list includes the likes of The Man with One Red Shoe (1985), Three Men and a Baby (1987), Point of No Return (1993) and True Lies (1994). In this case the original was Les Visiteurs (The Visitors) (1993), a time-travel comedy that was one of the biggest box-office hits in the history of French cinema. The remake didnt look very promising it was written by John Hughes, who had previously been responsible for the disastrous remakes of Miracle on 34th Street (1994), 101 Dalmatians (1996) and Flubber (1997). It does however bring back original stars Jean Reno and Christian Clavier, as well as director Jean-Marie Poire. Unfortunately when the film opens you see that Poire has replaced his name with Jean-Marie Gaubert, even though the lobby posters list Poire as director, something that almost certainly spells disaster.
Just Visiting follows Les Visiteurs in most of the basic aspects. The events leading up to the time-travel journey have been changed somewhat, the wizard gets to come along on the journey this time and the location has been moved from France to Chicago (which makes the subplot about losing the ancestral family lands somewhat vague). But the film follows the overall shape of the original in all the basic areas with Reno encountering his present-day descendant, Clavier finding a modern-day girlfriend and so on. It repeats many of the gags from the original the mediaevals attacking a car thinking it is a dragon, Clavier eating scraps food thrown to him in a restaurant, gags with electric lamps and the mediaevals drinking out of a toilet. Some of the comedy is engaging enough. Christian Clavier gets the most laughs, although Reno seems somewhat detached from the whole production and fails to project much of the comic certainty he did in the original. Surprisingly not too bad is Christina Applegate, who shakes typecasting as the blonde airhead and cult sex symbol in tvs Married ... With Children (1987-97) and gives a 180 degree removed performance as a demure modern girl.
But in every other respect Just Visiting is a disaster. This is a good example of Hollywood mindlessness having battered a good idea to death. It is filled with gratuitous CGI effects pop-up dragons, rooms full of flying people, peoples faces transforming into vegetables and trees. The time-travel sequences dont do anything as ordinary as just having people vanish but feature showy effects-heavy scenes of people turning to stone and crumbling, metamorphosing into liquid metal or squishing up into a human bouncing ball before they vanish. In comparison to the quite effects-lean and infinitely superior original it seems absurdly overproduced. Indeed it is one of the most ridiculous examples of the use of CGI effects just for the sake of it in any film in recent memory. The story has also been Americanized (clearly the influence of John Hughes, who seems to be becoming an increasing propagandist for Family Values). Theres the addition of a greedy and unfaithful boyfriend character for the purpose of allowing Christina Applegate a trite character arc that culminates in her self-assertion. Moreover the whole comedy riff on feudalism gets democratized with Clavier being given several lectures on the Land of the Free and finally shaking the yolk of servitude and going off to live the American Dream, being seen at the fadeout having made an instant fortune and driving off to Vegas with the girl and a set of designer clothes.
(Winner in this sites Worst Films of 2001 list. Winner for Worst Sequel/remake at this sites Best of 2001 Awards).
Copyright Richard Scheib 2001
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