Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Gad Elmaleh | ... | Choukri, alias Chouchou | |
Alain Chabat | ... | Stanislas de la Tour-Maubourg | |
Claude Brasseur | ... | Père Léon | |
Roschdy Zem | ... | Frère Jean | |
Catherine Frot | ... | Le docteur Nicole Milovavovich | |
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Julien Courbey | ... | Yekea |
Arié Elmaleh | ... | Vanessa | |
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Yacine Mesbah | ... | Djamila |
Micheline Presle | ... | La mère de Stanislas | |
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Jacques Sereys | ... | Le père de Stanislas |
Michaël Youn | ... | Le transformiste brésilien | |
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Stéphane Boucher | ... | L'inspecteur Grégoire |
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Olivia Dessolin | ... | L'apparition |
Anne Marivin | ... | La vendeuse supermarché | |
Jean-Paul Comart | ... | Le commissaire Molino |
Chouchou has just arrived in Paris from his home in North Africa. He is scatty and unworldly, and tries to get a bed for the night by spinning an implausible line about being a refugee from the Chilean dictator Pinochet. He is fortunate, because a kindly priest (Father Leon) in a working class suburb has some sympathy for him, and takes him in for a few nights. Father Leon also gets him a job with a lady psychoanalyst, Dr Milovavich, and the job is as receptionist and cleaner. Chouchou does the cleaning in a woman's dustcoat and when Dr Milovavich asks him what he would most like in the world, he replies that he would love to be a woman from head to toe. Dr M. is unabashed by this revelation, and tells him that from tomorrow he can come to work as a woman, Mlle Chouchou. He takes her at her word, and is startlingly convincing the next day, with good female body language, although let down by a marked dark beard shadow. Soon the doctor has to go away for a couple of days on business, ... Written by Hazel Freeman
Language issues, mediocre jokes, honestly just watch it for the campy looks