Absolutely Fabulous (2001 film)

2001 film by Gabriel Aghion From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Absolutely Fabulous (French: Absolument fabuleux) is a 2001 French comedy film co-written and directed by Gabriel Aghion. It is an adaptation of the British television sitcom Absolutely Fabulous, created by Jennifer Saunders and Dawn French.[3]

FrenchAbsolument fabuleux
Directed byGabriel Aghion
Written by
  • Gabriel Aghion
  • François-Olivier Rousseau
  • Rémi Waterhouse
  • Pierre Palmade
Quick facts French, Directed by ...
Absolutely Fabulous
Theatrical release poster
FrenchAbsolument fabuleux
Directed byGabriel Aghion
Written by
  • Gabriel Aghion
  • François-Olivier Rousseau
  • Rémi Waterhouse
  • Pierre Palmade
Based on
Produced byPascal Houzelot
Starring
CinematographyFrançois Catonné
Edited byMaryline Monthieux
Music byNicolas Neidhardt
Production
companies
Distributed byBAC Films
Release date
  • 29 August 2001 (2001-08-29) (France)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget$13.2 million[1]
Box office$4.9 million[2]
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The film stars Josiane Balasko, Nathalie Baye, Marie Gillain and Claude Gensac. To parallel the role of Lulu in the original series, French singer Chantal Goya appeared as herself. Saunders makes a cameo appearance as a spectator sitting next to Catherine Deneuve at a fashion show.

Cast

Cameo appearances

Production

Aghion's stated reason for making the film was to increase awareness of the series in France, where it was not widely known. For the screenplay, Aghion translated scenes from the original series, and tied them together into a coherent screenplay.

The role of Patsy was originally offered to Amanda Lear, who declined by saying that she had "already lived it".

Reception

The film performed poorly at the French box office and was panned by most French critics,[4] who argued that it failed to translate the typically British humour of the original television series.

References

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