Camping Cosmos

Camping Cosmos

Miss Vandeputte (Lolo Ferrari) and Mister Vandeputte, owners of Camping Cosmos.

Screenshot: Miss Vandeputte and Mister Vandeputte, owners of Camping Cosmos.
Directed by Jan Bucquoy
Produced by Francis De Smet
Written by Jan Bucquoy
Starring Lolo Ferrari
Noël Godin
Arno Hintjens
Jan Decleir
Herman Brusselmans
Music by Serge Gainsbourg
Vera Lynn
George Gershwin
Cinematography Michel Baudour
Edited by Matyas Veress
Distributed by Transatlantic Films Brussels
Release dates
  • 1996 (1996)
Running time
88 minutes
Country Belgium
Language French

Camping Cosmos is a Belgian 1996 film, sequel to La Vie sexuelle des Belges 1950-1978, directed by Jan Bucquoy. It stars Claude Semal, Lolo Ferrari (Miss Vandeputte), Noël Godin (Pierre Mertens), Herman Brusselmans (Herman) and Arno (Harry).

The movie's tagline is: Revolution, football, beer and frites. It is an unconventional and non-conformist story of the sexual habits of Belgians. Cosmos refers to the eternity of heaven in full contrast with this little campsite where so many people live together with their problems and limited view of the world. It also refers to the Russian cosmonauts who explored space, but who as communists did not believe in an afterworld. And last, the name of this Campsite Cosmos is referring to the sky without limit above the heads of its residents.[1]

Plot

On a campsite at the Belgian coast - where everybody wants to live in complete freedom and forget the obligations of everyday life - Jan Bucquoy, the delegate of the Ministry of Culture, must bring culture nearer to the working class. He presents things like Bertolt Brecht's play, Mother Courage and Her Children or an interview with the famous writer Pierre Mertens, but the vacationers at this caravan park are more interested in low-brow distractions, like soccer, boxing matches or beauty contests, as well as sexual adventures and temporary romances.

Production

The production was entirely in the hands of Transatlantic Films and its director Francis De Smet. Because of the refusal of the Flemish Government to raise the capital fund of the equivalent of 200.000 Euro at that time, the film had a substantial delay and was not ready in time for the Cannes Film Festival of 1996. This had consequences for the release later in Belgium. The film could not be released before 1997 in Paris.

Reception

The movie was at the origin of a huge controversy about the policy of Flemish state subsidising of movies not at least because of the presence of main actress Lolo Ferrari.[2]

References

  1. The Bulletin 20, 1996, article by P. L. Smith.
  2. See (French) wiki for the background of the controversy

External links

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