Asterix and Obelix vs. Caesar

1999 [FRENCH]

Action / Adventure / Comedy / Family / Fantasy

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Gérard Depardieu Photo
Gérard Depardieu as Obélix
Roberto Benigni Photo
Roberto Benigni as Lucius Detritus
Kerry Shale Photo
Kerry Shale as Unhygenix
Laetitia Casta Photo
Laetitia Casta as Falbala
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
970.33 MB
1280*548
French 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 45 min
P/S 0 / 6
1.95 GB
1904*816
French 5.1
NR
25 fps
1 hr 45 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by dr_foreman8 / 10

good, clean fun

When I was a little kid, my Dad picked up a copy of The Twelve Tasks of Asterix at the local video store. Oh, happy day! I've been completely enamored with Asterix and his adventures ever since.

The wily little Gaul first appeared in 1959, in a French children's magazine, and gradually his creators – Rene Goscinny and Albert Uderzo –built him up into a national phenomenon. Asterix has his own cartoons, his own theme park, and now his own big-budget movies (a pair of the most expensive French films ever made, in fact). Wildly popular throughout Europe and even parts of Asia, Asterix remains obscure in the United States, which is why this film has seen no official distribution here. Thankfully, Miramax recently purchased the rights to both this movie and its sequel, Asterix: Mission Cleopatra, so they should both be seen in the U.S. eventually.

The concept behind the character is simple. Asterix is a small, cunning warrior who, in conjunction with his strong, dumb friend Obelix, travels the Roman Empire thwarting the plans of Caesar and his imperialist minions. Aiding Asterix in his quest is the druid Getafix, who brews a magical potion that endows its drinker with super-strength.

After seeing disastrous big-screen revivals of Godzilla, The Avengers, and Star Wars, I was reluctant to see this poorly-reviewed film. Sure, it did great box office, earning more than double its $45 million price tag, but so what? Popularity isn't always an indicator of quality.

But hey, I liked it!

The film's design is just gorgeous, with the outrageous settings and costumes from the comic strips recreated in loving detail. The soundtrack is lovely, creating a real "period" feel. The opening segments are a big slow – the fish fight and the boulder-dropping sequence are pretty silly. But soon after that, the story takes off like a bullet.

The film has an episodic structure, with multiple subplots running at once. This has opened the film up to criticism, but I rather liked seeing a "greatest hits of Asterix" movie. It's all here – giant battles in the arena, Obelix falling in love with Panacea, Asterix clashing with a charlatan soothsayer, Getafix winning the golden sickle at the annual druid's conference. It's a cut-and-paste combination of several Asterix comics, but it works.

Much of the film's success is owed to the cast. Depardieu was born to play Obelix, and he dives into the role without pretense, playing the oaf with comic flair. Clavier's Asterix has been panned by some but I thought he was witty, and he bears an almost eerie resemblance to the comic book character in some shots. Benigni is the ideal Asterix villain, hamming it up like a lunatic, and Laetitia Casta makes a gorgeous Panacea.

The special effects are delightful. Romans get punched over hill and dale, Asterix pulls hilarious faces when he drinks his potion, and clever visual trickery makes dozens of Roman extras look like hundreds. The sets are spacious and impressive, and the film has wonderfully rich colors (particularly reds, which appear everywhere – Asterix's pants, the Roman uniforms and tents, the banners in the arena…)

Of course it's just silly rubbish, but it's perfect entertainment for kids and kids-at-heart. No one is killed and there's nothing mean-spirited about it. Big-budget though it is, the film has a European wit and silliness that is lacking in American action films. French critics were afraid that the film would be imitation Hollywood rubbish, infesting the otherwise "pure" French cinema, but I think those fears are unfounded. There's nothing commercial about Asterix, thank goodness.

Citizen Kane it ain't, but I was thoroughly entertained. Ignore the film's mostly bad reviews and give it a try (if you can get a copy, that is!). I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.

Reviewed by ma-cortes6 / 10

Big budgeted and spectacular live-action chapter of the popular cartoon from Rene Goscinny and Albert Uderzo

Decent and robust Asterix live-action entry with full of anachronisms that did exceptional business at the French box office and all around the world. Set in 50 B.C. , one small village of indomable Gauls holds out against the invaders for their independence . In the village lives our friends : Asterix : Christian Clavier , Obelix : Gerard Depardieu , Panoramix : Pieplu , the latter being the venerable local druid who brews magic potions , his speciality is the potion which gives the drinker supernatural strength , without forgetting the chief Abraracourcix : Michel Galabru and the singer Bardo Cacofonix . Then Caesar : Gottfried John and his aid of camp Detritus : Roberto Benigni plan to kidnap the notorious druid to get the secret elixir thas provides enormous strength . At the end takes place ordinary happy end thanks to an improved magic potion and a battle with the foregone conclusion routine still manages to surprise us.

Big fun and entertaining enough in this overwhelming outing of the immortal Gauls with plenty of state-of-art computer generator special effects and satisfying non-bloodthristy fights . The film is pretty well , thanks to a dash of hilarious scenes , silly anachronisms and a failed love story between Obelix and Falbala. Of course , there's a lot of battles with funny scenes and tongue-in-cheek humor . This time Asterix and Obelix take on an astute competitor named Detritus amusingly played by Roberto Benigni , who wants to overthrow Caesar , as well as one or two genuinely decent thrills , the best featuring a giant elephant , a monster , and a tub of tarantulas . Our two heroes, Asterix : Christian Clavier and Obelix : Gerard Depardieu are assisted by a great cast of familiar secondaries , such as : Roberto Benigni as Detritus , Michel Galabru as Abraracurcix , Daniel Prevost , Arielle Dombasle as Agecanonix's wife , the gorgeous Laetitia Casta as Falbala , Hardy Kruger Jr as Falbala's fiance , Michael Muller, Jean Pierre Castaldi, among others .

The motion picture was well directed by expert on comedies Claude Zidi who captures the outrageous adventures of the mighty Gauls , making a big box office and thanks to its huge cost just over 275 million francs . It is followed by "Asterix and Obelix , Mission Cleopatra" 2oo2 by Alain Chabat and "Asterix at the Olympic Games" 2008 by Frédéric Forrestier . Furthermore , other animated movies as "Asterix and the big fight" 1989 , "Asterix conquers America" , "Asterix and the Vikings" 2006 , among others .

Reviewed by TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews6 / 10

Not great, but not awful

I used to read the comics as a kid... by now, I only vaguely remember them, and those of the animated attempts that were produced that I watched, but a lot of things do seem to fit with what I remember. And hey, at least it's produced by the French, featuring the French, France being where the comic is actually from. There are many details that ring true as far as the source material goes... the first few moments contain a well-known image from the comics, reproduced in live action. This also has an interpretation of the singing of the village musician(I can't claim to know the original French names). Also seen is a recreation of the village leader on his shield. Whether or not you particularly care for seeing this, and whether or not you agree with this envisioning of it, it's there to take in. The small dog is there, as well, and he gets used some for comedy(if in fairly morbid and grotesque ways). The production values are of high quality. The acting is pretty good, if some is overacted, more or less intentionally. Depardieu isn't bad in his native language, either(and he is a fairly logical choice, as far as physical type goes, for Obélix, and Roberto Benigni(who, I guess, speaks French...?) is one of the best additions(although one could argue that he wasn't up against much),and gets several laughs. Ceasar was done well, the actor looks and performs as he should. The humor isn't bad, if at times childish, much of it derived from the comics(more or less well-integrated in the film) and some of it is run right into the ground. I did laugh at this film, if not terribly often. I watched this in the original, French language(not a fan of dubbing... actually, that's a powerful understatement),but some of the material still worked. The pacing is reasonable, well, it runs fine, at least. The plot isn't too bad, and works, if some more or less minor points don't make sense once you think about them(and one sub-plot is never fully resolved, characters not seen in the film anymore once they've done what they were there to do). Some things are lifted from the comics, though perhaps too much material from there was used, leaving too little time for development of what there is, as others have pointed out. This is a cartoon brought to life, obvious in the action(which I'm honestly not sure I've ever found particularly intense... entertaining, occasionally, maybe, but not intense). One particular character shows that the French, too, know of, and stoop to, the lowest common denominator(though I suppose it could have been more gratuitous, but this is at least partially a children's film... torture sequences and such notwithstanding). Most of the characters from the comics seem to be there(again, whether or not they're properly done or well-integrated can be debated). The effects are quite good, and help with the cartoon-y action that we know from the original stories by Goscinny(R.I.P.). Some ideas could have been explored in what the plot does, in particular something near the very end, but are not. There is one reference that could be considered clever... but by the second time it's made... yeah. The music isn't bad. The casting and costumes aren't bad. I guess fans might enjoy it, if they aren't too attached to the original. Making live action productions of drawn source material is seldom a good idea. I recommend this to those who want a live-action version of Astérix and Obélix, but not those looking for a good one. Whether or not the second one would fulfill that need, I can't say. 6/10

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