Buffet Froid (1979) Poster

(1979)

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8/10
Bunuel, farce and the policier? Yes please.
alice liddell1 March 2000
Imagine a crime film without all the usual elements - a beginning (crime), middle (investigation) and end; a guilty criminal and an investigative detective; a femme fatale who is punished; a restoration of order. BUFFET FROID is the nightmare flipside of the policier, where the hero is an unemployed philosopher, who may or may not be a murderer, who befriends his wife's killer, and his neighbour, a detective who sanctions paid homicide and is trapped in a plot where the answer he seeks is himself. Every revelation leads to further obfuscation and instead of the restoration of order is its destruction.

The film plays like a futuristic thriller directed by Bunuel - and if Blier's ultimate timidity means it's never quite as good as that, it's still a remarkable achievement in mainstream, never mind generic, cinema, and very, very funny.
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6/10
dream or absurd or both?
dromasca16 May 2019
'Buffet Froid' made in 1979 by Bertrand Blier can be seen as an almost perfect antithesis of the films of the French New Wave that had burst into the cinema world two decades ago. If the New Wave was a Reformation, this film belongs to the Counter-Reformation. Formal simplicity is opposed by abstract sophistication. Lively street scenes are opposed by empty streets at night or lofts transported from New York to the sky-scrappers in the Defense district of Paris. The characters drawn from life are opposed by characters descending from Beckett's or Ionesco's theater. Sincerity is opposed by lack of emotion. Naturalism is opposed by absurd. But, maybe it's all a dream?

The film starts with a ten minute scene that takes place in a Paris subway station. Two characters entertain a dialogue that could be extracted from 'En attendant Godot'. It's about the dreams, or better said the nightmares that haunt one of them (played by Gérard Depardieu). In the dream he is a wanted assassin, followed but never caught by the police. Does the dream start here? Or maybe we are in a dream in the beginning, as Parisians know, the La Defense subway station is never completely empty, not even at night. Further action includes corpses, fast consoled widows, car chases, assassination attempts through music, wine bottles and canned food. Nothing makes too much sense. The characters act like robots that do a lousy job, both socially and emotionally.

The film has an interesting aesthetics, even if too obviously programmatic. Dialogues are fun, even if they seem a little retro nowadays. Existentialism and absurd theater need landmarks to be appreciated and enjoyed all the way. These are missing in this movie, which looks more like an absurd theater show filmed in the '70s. As a spectator I can not fail to appreciate the acting performances of Depardieu, Bernard Blier, and others, but I would have preferred them to be used for better causes.
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8/10
cool and totally out of this world
sansay26 January 2006
I went in really having no idea what this movie was about. I do that sometimes so as to get more surprise, in essence to get more out of the experience. Well in this case I was not only surprised but even amazed. Nothing that I was expecting was coming out as I thought... ohhh yes, except at the end. The final was the only logical way to conclude such a strange story. And interestingly enough, that too goes against common sense, whereas in regular movie, the final is often an attempt to surprise the viewers.

Of course this is a farce, of course it makes no sense whatsoever. But the point is that it's funny and clearly out of this world. So, once you get the idea, all you have to do is let yourselves be carried by the flow. In fact, after a while I was even playing with possible next victims... but I was fooled all the time. I am just too Cartesian, hehehe!

At any rate, it does take a special sense of humor to appreciate this movie. The acting by all the seasoned actors is just right, cool, no exaggeration, just enough to get the story moving along, however weird it might be.

In conclusion, this is a very unusual and therefore interesting movie.
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Great farce, surreal abstraction and a fascinating approach to character that rewards repeated viewings
ThreeSadTigers29 July 2008
DETECTIVE(S): Two men sit on a RER station platform at night. They engage in small talk. A knife is drawn. Later, one of these men will turn up dead. From here, things get ever more absurd; with the film becoming an arcane detective story in which questions are asked, but never answered, and answers are given to questions that were never asked. It's funny! And presented in the style of a surrealist nightmare of deadpan characterisations and a beautiful aimlessness that might just be a sly-social critique on the generation pre-François Mitterrand, and of the complexities of the overwhelming dislocation of modern-day existence. ABSTRACTION: The film can also be interpreted as a preposterous parody of the erosions of French national values against a jarring, Manhattan like skyline; which here seems to underpin the lost, isolation and stark confusion central to the majority of the recurring characters, as they become dwarfed by a surrounding architecture that is loaded with ideas of consumer-driven aspiration, social change and industrial improvement.

WINDOWS: To capture this sense of heightened atmosphere, director Bertrand Blier makes great use of the Hauts-de-Seine area of Paris - and in particular La Défense - with its towers of glass and steel and the areas of flat concrete that take on an even more surreal and alienated quality as a result of the nocturnal setting and the film's complete lack of any such signs of life. It creates a world that is oddly compelling and completely fascinating, with the film becoming a sort of aimless, rambling, nocturnal odyssey; as an unemployed philosopher takes up with a corrupt detective and the hapless criminal that murdered his wife and embarks on a bizarre quest that seems to be about everything and nothing simultaneously. BOATING: Throughout the film, the form and presentation of Blier's script and direction seem to suggest a sort of Buñuelian take on The Last of the Summer Wine (BBC, 1973), with a few further hints to the territory of Jacques Rivette's epic, multi-layered farce, Celine and Julie Go Boating (1972) thrown in along the way. Like that film, Buffet Froid (1979) deals with playful ideas of abstraction as a picaresque charade, as we shuffle between miniature-vignettes that capture a feeling rather than a story, and a sense of idyllic, lazy meandering playfulness that occasionally jars against the darker, though always tongue-in-cheek elements of the script.

ADVENTURE: The narrative is episodic and often confusing, as we find ourselves in the midst of a mad jumble of ideas and interpretations that jostle for our attention amidst the charismatic performances and the constant reliance on blistering, surrealist wit. Without question, the film is completely charming despite its seeming lack of an overall structure or plot; as three characters submerge themselves in an adventure that seems to involve roaming the nocturnal streets of Paris and engaging in darkly comic sketches of absurd role-play and duplicitous abandon. GAMES: These escapades ultimately tells us a great deal about the characters, without having to resort to lengthy scenes of dialog or interaction; with Blier building on the tone of that opening scene on the station platform and carrying it through to the later scenes, in which the deft character relationships and effortless games within the script captivate us and take us along with these ciphers on an ironic adventure that eventually closes in on itself. It naturally sounds more complicated than it actually is, however, fans of French cinema and the progressive surrealism of many of the filmmakers aforementioned - chiefly Buñuel and Rivette - will surely get a big kick out of the film's constant charm, energy, and spirited sense of subversion.

INFLUENCE: Likewise, the film should also appeal to anyone with a fondness for the films of Aki Kaurismäki - whose second film, Calamari Union (1985) owes something of a debt - and the deadpan constructions of Roy Andersson's recent work, Songs From the Second Floor (2000) and You, The Living (2007). You can also see a certain influence from legendary firebrand Jean Luc Godard present in the film's disregard for genre and deconstructive approach to narrative convention; while the look and feel of Blier's film may have even gone on to influence the style of the "cinema du look" - a brief resurgence of high-concept, 80's French cinema that looked to the spirit of La Nouvelle Vague and applied it to more contemporary concerns. Films such as Diva (1981), Subway (1985) and Mauvais Sang (1986) have a similar feeling of uncertainty and dislocation, with the elements of irreverent humour and characters reduced to ironic ciphers. DECONSTRUCTION: Its self-aware cinema then; a form a film-making that self-consciously reinvents itself from one scene to the next, but somehow feels completely natural; even as we move from a low-key sequence of character interaction, to a bizarre, satirical sequence in a gloomy country-mansion!

COLD-CUTS: Ultimately, I like this film because I like the characters, and I like the lazy, languorous atmosphere that is created by the situations that present themselves. This is helped by the perfect casting of an excellent Depardieu giving one of his best, comedic performances, ably supported by Jean Carmet as a nonchalant murderer and misogynist and the director's own father, esteemed actor Bernard Blier, as the contradictory police inspector. If you can appreciate this atmosphere, the dynamics of the narrative, the absurd jokes and the warm sparring of the characters then you should get a lot out of Buffet Froid, which not only offers entertainment, but a puzzle of sorts for the audience to make sense of. I can understand why some would dismiss it completely, but for me, the film is just endlessly fascinating and filled with deadpan farce that only the French can convey. It all builds incessantly to that unexpected final, in which the true absurdities of the film become apparent and Blier hits us with closing gag that somehow makes sense of the entire experience.
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7/10
Absurd and free
vijaythepro29 July 2019
A parody of the noir genre where everyone's reactions to actions are not what it should be. It appears to be a strange dream where the protagonist is living in but as the story moves the absurdity catches up to him wishing to wake up from it. It's not a dream, it's a guy who's stuck in some crazy world created by Blier I think. It's an oddball experimental film coming from Bertrand bliers playful cynical mind. Goes to show what a filmmaker can do if he's truly free to do what he wants.
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10/10
top dark
jimi9929 June 2002
This is one of my favorite black comedies, on a level with Strangelove, After Hours, The Loved One, Little Murders and Cul de Sac. A kind of Three Stooges meets Samuel Beckett, it successfully traverses farce, slapstick, absurdism, and intellectual existential psychodrama. The stooges are hilarious, particularly Bernard Blier, the great French character actor (and father of director,) while the women are all in danger but really in control of this careening nightmare. The shift 3/4ths of the way through from the surreal city nightscape into the sunny countryside is brilliant and leads to a perfect ending...
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7/10
Could have been a masterpiece...but, no!
Hostile Domicile6 October 2002
This could have been a great French black comedy. The shots particularly on urban life are well executed. The story progresses into just right pace with unexpected twist in it. However, when the film nears its end, it devolved into a rubbish piece of French cinema. I imagined that the people making this film got a good start and then suddenly got bored with it and quickly finished it with a very bad ending. Great acting and cinematography were wasted unnecessarily.
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9/10
Are you an ear, nose and throat specialist?
R_O_U_S7 February 2004
Seriously, Gerard Depardieu has done very little for English language cinema. 1492? My Father The Hero? Green Card? I'll pass, thanks. But with subtitles he's great. This little-known absurdist drama puts him as one of three mismatched men linked by murder and random chance. The films opens at a train station where Depardieu meets a man who is soon dead – possibly by Depardieu's own hand. His wife dismisses it, but is soon dead herself. The police detective upstairs doesn't want to know, he has his own problems. And then the wife's murderer shows up for a chat. Could be a terrible thriller – is a bizarre comedy. The daunting, oppressive cityscapes in the bulk of the film eventually give way to a disconcerting bucolic countryside for the finale, but the surrealism never lets up. Enter this world, and don't expect to leave intact.
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6/10
great acting -- lousy premise
flippo4 August 1999
Though everything about this film is technically well done, it lacks both edge and depth. The story is pointedly absurd and while there are a good number of funny moments, the point of the film, much like Godard's Weekend, (which is a much better film in my opinion), is to abuse the viewer. If you are into that thing vas-y, amuse-toi, s'y abuse!
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9/10
A black comedy about human life in mass society
red_hyro24 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
The philosopher Hannah Arendt once wrote: "What makes mass society so difficult to bear is not the number of people involved, or at least not primarily, but the fact that the world between them has lost it's power to gather them together, to relate and to separate them" I believe this film is attempting to express this sense of alienation through its absurd black humor, centered around an unemployed young man who has nightmares and is followed by anonymous death in his random comings and goings. Others have given various plot details, thus I will concern myself only with pointers and descriptions which may enrich your experience of this film.

What is important to notice at first is not the absurdity of the action of the plot, which is very apparent from the first conversation of the film, but rather the concrete circumstances of the young man at the beginning of the film. He is unemployed, has no friends, and lives in an apartment building which had been until recently empty. Relationships he has and which he forms are without love, genuine care or meaning; they are merely people he bumps into on the way to eventual death (this includes most disturbingly his wife). He is not a part of anything, and makes no plans. This is a caricature of the modern, mass-society life, in which humans have no community in which their actions may be remembered after their death, no relation to others defined by the artifice which structures their world (i.e. living in apartment building, your neighbors are strangers, and you are 'closer' to people who may live halfway around the world, which is not how things have always been or will always be), and no connection in their lives to the means by which they are able to survive as an animal (i.e. your food shows up in supermarkets from somewhere and you buy it).

What is life for this man? What awaits him? To be eventually erased it seems, blotted out without trace and forgotten as flies which we swat are forgotten. The films is terrifyingly funny in this sense, as we laugh at the empty absurdity of a life which has no story for the one living it, just a horrifying series of events which have no rational rhyme or reason, a life which the person living it accepts but does not embrace, cold in the world he finds himself occupying for a while.

This may not seem like much of a recommendation, and yet for those who are interested in have their entertainment tainted with the challenge all good art poses for us as individuals, the view of life it espouses and which we find has become entangled with our own, making things stand out in our world that we had been unable to see before which prompt questions, often disturbing, we must seek to answer, 'Buffet Froid' is definitely worth checking out, whatever your final opinion as to its meaning or worth. It asks the viewer, "and what about you? You laugh at this man's life but how is your life fundamentally different from his? Is what you're occupying yourself with before death all that less absurd?"
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7/10
Beautifully filmed, whimsical black comedy
alcerto18 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Buffet Froid's absurdist narrative is made lighter by several things:

-it's impeccably filmed by Bertrand Blier, with beautiful cinematography, excellent actors' blocking and a brisk pace;

-the casting/acting itself is equally marvelous with lots of chemistry from several French greats. Instead of upstaging attempts, they coalesce into a group of kooky types who go about aiding and abetting/committing murder and sipping red wine. Bernard Blier's deadpan inspector is particularly fascinating but they all shine;

-the scenes are encapsulated into specific episodes so to speak and at the same time flow very nicely;

-locations look eerie and yet familiar/dreamlike.

All in all, it's a movie whose macabre plot is never quite dour because of its surreal tone.
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8/10
A classic French absurdist story
iguana-76 January 2003
Alphonse Tram is plagued by nightmares of murder and pursuit. Employing existentialism, absurdism and even a little slapstick, writer/director Bertrand Blier leads Alphonse (Gerard Depardieu), his randomly acquired companions, and the viewer through a maze of hallways, stairways, and pathways to meet his fate.

The performances by Depardieu, Blier's father Bernard Blier, and a supporting cast made up of stars from French film and theatre (including an early cameo by Michel Serrault, best known as Albin/Zaza in "La Cage aux Folles"), are all marvelously nuanced and the film hasn't a beat out of place.
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2/10
rather stupid if you ask me
planktonrules1 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This film is an "absurdist" film where NOTHING makes any sense and people react irrationally throughout--and this IS the intention of the writers. This style of film making isn't super popular--at least not when it is carried to such an extreme as in this film. I could see by the ratings that many liked this experimental-type film--I just thought it was stupid. I'm either a Philistine or the little boy yelling that the emperor has no clothes. Read on and you decide.

Okay, on to the plot. Instead of trying to describe it (that would be VERY hard), suffice to say that every time something occurs, people react to that action in an unpredictable or contradictory way. This is supposed to be artsy and deliberately confusing and provocative to the viewer. I guess I'm just too weird and narrow-minded--all I really want out of a movie is something I find watchable.

Let me give you an example: The main character's wife is murdered. This comes completely out of the blue. When the police show him to the battered corpse, he reacts with no real emotion--more like you would expect him to react when he is buying a loaf of bread. A little bit later, a stranger knocks on the door and identifies himself as the man who murdered the wife. So, what does the husband do?! He asks him to come in and have dinner with him. Then, they go on a series of completely disconnected adventures that make NO SENSE at all. This just made my brain hurt.

Yes, yes, yes--I KNOW the Absurdists make "art" like this just to get these sort of reactions out of the viewers. But what's next--having chimps in art galleries flinging poo at the patrons or releasing bees into a maternity ward?! Yeah, these will also baffle and confuse and alienate people, too. But is that what we want from movies? As for me, certainly NOT. An absurdist film CAN be worthwhile if it is confusing and provocative as well as interesting OR funny. This movie was just stupid.

PS--if you actually enjoy this sort of nonsensical film, then try watching SONGS FROM THE SECOND FLOOR--both films are very similar on many levels.
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A Monument of humour
Olivier-2330 August 1999
A monument of dark humour, Buffet Froid relies more on what is not said rather than the obvious slapstick humour we're being fed on extensively these days. I showed it to many people and a lot of them admitted they did not understand because it was not "anchored in reality" - to which I answered that not everything is supposed to be. This is superior quality surrealism, and the trio Depardieu-Blier-Carmet works wonders. RENT IT !
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10/10
A scathingly surreal and hilarious black comedy
Afracious31 August 2000
This is a superbly surreal black comedy from Bertrand Blier. It won a Cesar award for the screenplay. Gerard Depardieu plays an unemployed guy named Alphonse Tram, who may or may not have killed a stranger in the subway. He lives with his wife in a strange and stylish, almost empty high-rise apartment block. That is until she is killed by a misogynist murderer who is afraid of the dark. He knocks on Alphonse's door and announces this to him after her death; Alphonse then immediately makes him a meal and chats amiably with him.

The other main character is an odd police chief inspector (played by the director's father). Alphonse tells him he could have knifed a man in the subway, and later introduces him to his wife's murderer. The inspector completely overlooks all this of course. The inspector tells the other two men it's better to keep the murderers on the streets, that way they don't contaminate the innocent in prison. Another scene has the three men comforting the wife of a man they have just killed (on his instructions). She is then extremely ill in bed, and the trio call for a doctor. He arrives, and then makes love to the stricken lady while the men watch. Afterwards he gives the diagnosis, "It's just a minor viral infection."

The misogynist murderer is later seen searching for a woman alone to kill. A man tells him there's a mature lady who lives next door to him. "How do you know she's mature?", "Because she makes Jam.", he offers. The police inspector later asks for around thirty officers to accompany him to a house to arrest a violinist, just because he is allergic to them. It is all very funny, surreal and refreshing. If you like the later films of Buñuel, you'll like Buffet Froid.
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10/10
Some people just don't get it...
enchantedmonk6 April 2003
Some viewers think this dark comedy is "boring" and "disappointing". Granted, this movie is not for everybody. But to say that nobody would like it is purely idiotic. Nobody has the same humor, and you cannot generalize when it comes to such variable parameters. To me, Buffet Froid is the quintessential black comedy, and it made me laugh from start to ending, despite its slow tempo and absurd-like tone. If I had to compare it with American dark comedies, I would say Fargo comes pretty close. I would also suggest the following movies for those who enjoyed Buffet Froid: Barton Fink, Happiness, Delicatessen, Dr Strangelove, Carne, Cible Emouvante and Man Bites Dog.
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8/10
Excellent, coherent mixture of Nihilism and Humor
Horror-yo13 March 2018
It takes a special kind of quality to make anything that is bleak and absurd and empty into something that truly holds up without being complete intellectualism/artistic onanism. This film achieves that.

It also takes a special kind of quality to make anything completely remote and arbitrary funny. This film achieves that. It's quite hilarious at times because it's so fresh, and random and unexpected although it's utterly consistent with itself.

Depardieu is awesome as always and more than any other buys into the shenanigans of the concept brilliantly, it's like he's a real life person although his entire character is most perfectly ridiculous and impossible.

There are fine symbolic psychological traits that bring about some kind of aesthetic to the film (Blier's character and his aversion for music). Moreover, the completely barren urban landscapes, seemingly perpetually nocturnal, (that vacant building) and the eerie absence of anyone but the protagonists during any one scene bring this nightmarish facet to the whole which adds to the comic absurdism. It's like they're all alone in their strange old little planet, and it doesn't seem to bother them in the slightest.

Top notch. Also, the pacing and format are just right. At under 1hr30 this is pure efficient cinema that delivers the goods and don't spoil that fine taste from the beginning. Ending is on par with the rest of it. Very well done. Rare quality. 8.5/10.
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9/10
Surreal and brilliant
R_O_U_S17 October 2003
I won't go into the plot, it's not important, except to say that it centres on a "friendship" between three men. One may have murdered someone in the subway. One is a probably homicidal detective. And the third murdered the first man's wife. This is a French film, and it's hard to see it working well in any other language or setting. The sudden shift to the countryside is a little jarring, but that would be my only minor criticism of the film.
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3/10
If I don't know the rules, I don't want to play the game
irishm14 May 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I accept the fact that French cinema is very different from American movies, and I'm okay with that. I like France, the French culture, and the language... that's why I watch French films. But with this one I couldn't get past the 30-minute mark. Others have pointed out that it's of the "absurdist" school, and I guess that just isn't my cup of tea. I couldn't make any sense of it so I couldn't enjoy it. The performances were good and the cinematography was also very good. But geez, when a guy has a calm casual conversation with a man who's just been stabbed and who offers him the knife back in case he might need it in the future, I don't know what to make of it. Is it real? Is it a dream? Is it the perception of Depardieu's character, who may not be "all there"? I dunno. I gave up. On to more literal things.
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9/10
Alice Doesn't Live There Anymore
writers_reign1 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
For a film that embraces Alice In Wonderland logic it's appropriate that it starts as a man (Alphonse Tram) descends into a hole in the ground and by extension into a subterranean nightmare. Having reached the train level of La Defense metro station Tram (Gerard Depardieu) ignores the acres of empty space and chooses a seat alongside the only other person there (Michel Serrault) pursuing him and engaging him in surreal conversation. At one point Tram produces a flick knife, offers it to Serrault who declines it and places it on an adjacent seat. Moments later it has disappeared despite there being no other person present. La Defense is a terminus so when a train appears, Serrault boards it and it moves off in the same direction it travelled to get there (in other words into the buffers) this is confirmation that we are in an unreal world which is perhaps a figment of Tram's imagination.A little later as Tram leaves the station he finds Serrault slumped against a wall wearing a knife that turns out to be the knife that Tram offered to Serrault which disappeared mysteriously. Serrault is philosophical about his condition and urges Tram to take his money for which he will have no further use. Tram returns home - a high-rise apartment block in which he and his wife WERE the only tenants but now, his wife tells him, there is a new tenant. Tram pays a social call and learns that the new tenant is Inspector Morvandieu (Bernard Blier, the director's father) who is not too concerned about a stiff in the subway. Then Tram's wife turns up dead and the killer (Jean Carmet) visits Tram to confess his guilt and ask for a souvenir of the dead woman. All three men share a drink when a fourth man appears, and tells Tram he knows that Tram killed Serrault, the Inspector cautions him against blackmail and the murderer asks for the new arrival's sympathy on the grounds that Tram has just lost his wife. But they needn't have worried, the new arrival merely wishes to hire Tram to kill someone else. And so it goes. All hands play this dead straight which strengthens the nightmare aspect. Eventually the fourth man is killed and his wife has already packed and is anxious to go with the other three. In a reference to Minnelli's Some Came Running she asks Tram if he ever removes his coat (he hadn't up to that point, just as 'Bama' Dillert (Dean Martin) never removed his hat in the Minnelli film). There's also an aside in which Tram and Morvandieu visit a very Charles Addams house where a classical concert is taking place. Morvandieu speaks of his aversion to classical music whereupon the hostess takes him to a bedroom, urges him to get into bed on the grounds that he isn't looking well then summons five very Charles Addams characters to play Brahms with a nod to Francois Sagan with the question 'Do you like Brahms?'. Morvandieu promptly shoots the entire quintet and later says his wife was a violinist who drove him crazy with her practicing. Watching this film is like peeling an onion soaed in lsd; layer after layer more surreal yet normal than the last. After the darkness of the urban jungle it finally emerges into full daylight for the final nightmares. The only way to approach it is on its own terms which will bring its own rewards.
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10/10
A preternaturally perverse revenger's tragedy wherein no fell dead goes wickedly unpunished!
Weirdling_Wolf7 September 2020
In my admittedly blithe and unwaveringly Blier- biased opinion, that most audaciously gifted Gallic genre iconoclast, Bertrand Blier, remains the perversely playful 'L'Enfant terrible' of French new wave cinema, and his deliciously immoral, abyssal-dark comedy thriller, 'Buffet Froid' aka 'Cold Cuts' is a ferociously frosty treat, a preternaturally perverse revenger's tragedy wherein no fell dead goes wickedly unpunished!

The impish, perfectly blackened, pitilessly sardonic script is a mordantly mirthsome triumph of taciturn terror tactics, and the immaculate, strangely skewed performances by our determinedly devilish trio of ingenuous, knife-fetishizing psychopath, Alphonse Tram (Gerard Depardieu), the demonically deadpan police inspector Morvandieu (Bernard Blier), and an especially weaselling, paranoid portrayal of the terrifically timorous strangler 'L'assassin' (Jean Carmet) makes for a rare epicurean feast for the senses! There is something palpably feline, unwholesomely capricious about the unpredictably off-beat narrative, the predatory glee with which the director toys with film noir conventions, capriciously twisting the chiaroscuro crime tropes into an alternate, far more abstract realm! Like Chabrol on ayahuasca, Hitchcock on HRT, or, perhaps, merely the inimitable, Bertrand Blier on fabulously feral form, 'Buffet Froid' is a sympathetically surrealistic film treasure, and I truly envy anyone who has yet to experience the ambivalently murderous charms therein! Dig in!
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10/10
The best French comedy ever !
Cinemaquebecois3 March 1999
BUFFET FROID is a masterpiece, nothing else. Director Bertrand Blier uses his talent mostly in the dialogues. One catch phrase after another, the screenplay is full of surprises. And don't try to expect something because surely it will be the opposite. Depardieu is terrific with a lot of flegme and energy. Since this cult movie, Blier tried to do the same over and over again. But this is truly the original one.
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8/10
Wonderful absurdist black comedy about loneliness and dehumanization of society
ericmarseille12 April 2013
This film is really one of those little unknown gems that one can find by patiently prodding into the universal filmography.

The plot is totally absurd, but this isn't the point.

The subject of the film is clearly the emotive loss that people go through living in cold, dehumanized societies.

Simply put : an unemployed young man, a killer, a disenchanted police inspector team up simply to find the most minuscule spark of what vaguely could resemble a human feeling in a modern, desolate town.

This is a joyously crazy film...The directing is top-notch, you just wonder what will be the reaction of each character to an oncoming situation ; I absolutely love the sets, that hideous concrete tower, the oppressing "hotel particulier", and that incredibly lugubrious country lodge, set in the most sinister country landscape that I've been able to see in my country.

The general tone is one of total indifference to despair, death and solitude, except maybe your own, but only when it's too late.

Also : the trio, Depardieu (young, still with this animal feel), Bernard Blier (simply wonderful), Marcel Carmet just works fine! if you love something that titillates, this film is just like savoring a glass of bordeaux wine from a good château...You'll just feel better after watching it.

Too bad the end looks botched and bungled...If not I'd have given it a 9!
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8/10
If Beckett had Written for Cinema...
Eumenides_03 February 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Buffet Froid works like a Samuel Beckett play. It eschews any psychology or background history and simply focuses on absurd situations, thinly linked into what only generously could be called a plot. It's so unpredictable, unconventional and nonsensical it's pointless to describe it. Do people describe Endgame or Waiting for Godot? Using elements from horror and detective fiction, Bertrand Blier crafts a darkly humorous movie about lonely men who wonder whether or not they're killers, of police detectives who don't capture killers and chat with them peacefully. Yes, in words it doesn't sound funny at all, but in Blier's hands it becomes a fascinating movie.

The movie is shot in minimalist terms, with few characters, usually in empty rooms and empty streets, and without using music. Human relationships are strange and fickle, and the natural order of things has ceased to exist. I for one loved the way Blier used silence in the movie, reminding me of the Coens or David Lynch. And his wide shots of peaceful, darkly-lit hallways and streets provoked in me a bigger sense of unease than many serious horror movies.

Anyone wanting a vacation from traditional film-making should watch Buffet Froid and marvel at the strangeness cinema can create when its makers think a bit outside the box.
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8/10
On dehumanization: astonishing and unique
The principle of the film is to take banal situations, from everyday life, and to twist them with elements of absurdity and mise en abyme. With the background of a killer's journey.

The film relies a lot on the settings: the district of La Défense in Paris and its towers, at night, the empty esplanades, the empty apartment towers, the wasteland at night, the underground station, the underground parking, the deserted corridors, the greenery at the end, the lake and the rocks. All of them being deserted and empty. Including the apartments: Gérard Depardieu's apartment, which doesn't have much in the way of a human touch, or Bernard Blier's apartment with its unpacked boxes. All the sets in the La Défense district, corridors, esplanades, platforms, staircases, halls, are empty. They accentuate the unreal side of the film, almost fantastic.

The film is hard on women: it denounces misogyny and shows how women are transformed into objects. With the very beautiful and tragic character of Geneviève Page.

Beautiful opening scene too, with Michel Serrault on the train platform at La Défense station.

All in all, a symphony to put industrial habitats in abyss and denounce their lack of humanism, the film remains astonishing and unique in its kind.
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