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CULTURE

The disability comedy besting blockbusters in France

A low-budget French comedy about a camp for disabled people has become a "societal phenomenon" in France, trouncing Hollywood blockbusters like "Dune 2" and Mad Max spin-off "Furiosa".

The disability comedy besting blockbusters in France
Members of the film "Un p'tit truc en plus" (A little Something Extra) arrive at the 77th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France, on May 22, 2024. (Photo by Christophe SIMON / AFP)

“A Little Something Extra” has sold 5.8 million tickets as the latest box office numbers were released on Wednesday.

It is the latest example of a film to become a massive hit outside Paris, where snobbier cinephiles tend to ignore broad comedies in favour of arthouse chin-strokers.

But five weeks after its release, even Parisians are now flocking to see the light-hearted tale about a bank robber who pretends to be disabled to hide out in a holiday camp.

Each week it has easily bested new Hollywood releases, including “The Fall Guy” and “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” with budgets many times its own €6.2 million.

READ MORE: 12 popular French films that teach you something about France

Experts say “A Little Something Extra”, starring and directed by stand-up comedian Artus (who goes by a single name) has struck a chord at a time when the country is embroiled in a bitter European election campaign.

“We’re in a moment in France where the political atmosphere is highly charged and people are looking for something to bring them back together,” Eric Marti, of box office analysts Comscore, told AFP.

Describing it as a “societal phenomenon”, he said the film, which features several actors with disabilities, was inclusive without the increasingly unpopular left-wing rhetoric about representation.

“It has a notion of inclusion — but for real. It’s not a lecture. It’s simple, funny, moving and respectful,” said Marti.

Some of the biggest successes of recent years in France have featured disability.

“La Famille Belier” was about a deaf family — remade into the Oscar-winning “Coda” — and remains the biggest such hit of the last decade, for now.

Even bigger was 2011’s “The Intouchables” about a quadriplegic aristocrat and his live-in carer (played by “Lupin” star Omar Sy) that sold some 19.5 million tickets.

“A Little Something Extra” has benefitted from long-term investment in France’s cinema, said Marti.

“But in all countries where cinemas have recovered from the pandemic… it’s places where local films have worked well,” he said.

“France maybe has a few more than most. It shows we aren’t dependent on the latest American blockbuster.”

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CULTURE

Shipping magnate buys France’s BFMTV news channel

One of France’s biggest news channels, BFMTV, has been bought by billionaire shipping magnate Rodolphe Saade.

Shipping magnate buys France’s BFMTV news channel

Saade’s CMA CGM Group announced the surprise buy-out of Altice Media, which owns BFMTV and the RMC radio station, in March for €1.55 billion.

BFMTV had long been France’s number one news channel, though in the last two months it has been overtaken for the first time by CNews – seen as part of a rightward shift in the country’s media landscape.

CMA CGM said it had finalised the purchase after receiving the green light from media watchdog Arcom and the Competition Authority.

READ ALSO Explained: French newspapers, TV and magazines

“After having received the approval of the competent regulatory authorities, the CMA CGM group and Merit France (the family’s holding company) today finalised the acquisition of 100 percent of the capital of Altice Media,” it said in a statement.

Saade, who has French and Lebanese citizenship, took over his Marseille-based shipping and logistics company from his father, Jacques Saade, who died in 2018.

He has been working his way into French media, buying newspaper La Tribune and regional Provence dailies in recent years, as well as stakes in TV channel M6 and online video site Brut.

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