Little Indian, Big City
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''Un indien dans la ville'' (''An Indian in the city'') is a
1994 File:1994 Events Collage.png, From left, clockwise: The 1994 Winter Olympics are held in Lillehammer, Norway; The Kaiser Permanente building after the 1994 Northridge earthquake; A model of the MS Estonia, which Sinking of the MS Estonia, sank in ...
French film by Hervé Palud. The film had a limited English language release under the title ''Little Indian, Big City''. Part of the movie was shot in Miami, Florida, United States. It was later adapted for an American audience under the title '' Jungle 2 Jungle'', set in Manhattan and starring Tim Allen and
Martin Short Martin Hayter Short (born March 26, 1950) is a Canadian-American actor, comedian, and writer. He has received various awards including two Primetime Emmy Awards, and a Tony Award. In 2019 Short became an Officer of the Order of Canada. He ...
. A tie-in game for the Game Boy was released only in France.


Plot summary

Steph, a commodities broker living in Paris, wants a divorce from his wife Patricia to marry another woman: Charlotte. However, Patricia has been living among the French Guiana Amazonas
Indians Indian or Indians may refer to: Peoples South Asia * Indian people, people of Indian nationality, or people who have an Indian ancestor ** Non-resident Indian, a citizen of India who has temporarily emigrated to another country * South Asia ...
for the past 13 years, so Steph travels to the Indian village to meet her and ask her to sign the divorce papers. When they meet, Patricia tells Steph that they have a teenage son, Mimi-Siku, who has been raised as an Amazonian Indian. Patricia tells Steph she will not sign the divorce papers unless Steph takes Mimi-Siku on a visit to Paris, which he agrees to. In Paris, Mimi-Siku meets the children of Steph's colleague Richard and falls in love with his daughter Sophie.


Cast

* Thierry Lhermitte as Stéphane Marchadot * Patrick Timsit as Richard Montignac *
Ludwig Briand Ludwig Briand (born 9 May 1981 at Soisy-sous-Montmorency) is a French actor. Named after Ludwig van Beethoven, he got his first acting job in 1991 at the age of ten as Gavroche in the stage musical ''Les Misérables''. Then another musical '' Pa ...
as Mimi-Siku * Miou-Miou as Patricia Marchadot *
Arielle Dombasle Arielle Dombasle (born April 27, 1953)Dombasle's year of birth has been a subject of much debate, and various sources have given dates ranging from 1953 to 1958. is an American-born French singer, actress, director and model. Her breakthrough ro ...
as Charlotte * Sonia Vollereaux as Marie Montignac * Jackie Berroyer as Lawyer Joanovici * Marc de Jonge as Rossberg * Louba Guertchikoff as Mrs. Godette * Philippe Bruneau as Mr. Maréchal * Dominique Besnehard as Maître Dong * Cheik Doukouré as Mr. Bonaventure * Marie-Charlotte Leclaire as Rossberg's Secretary * Vladimir Kotlyarov as Pavel Kuсhnukov * Olga Jiroušková as Sonia Kuchnukova * Chick Ortega as Russian * Paco Portero as The Snake Man * Sonia Lezinska as Stewardess * Marc Brunet as Policeman * Olivier Hémon as Policeman * Thierry Desroses as Customs Officer *
Katja Weitzenböck Katja is a feminine given name. In Germany, the Netherlands, Flanders, and Scandinavia, it is a pet form of Katherine. Katja may refer to: Music *Katja Andy (1906–2013), German-American pianist * Katja Ebstein (born 1945), German singer *Kat ...
as Miss Van Hodden * Pauline Pinsolle as Sophie Montignac * Stanley Zana as Jonathan Montignac * Gaston Dolle as Benjamin


Release

The film opened in France on 14 December 1994. Shortly after its release in France, Disney saw this film as a possibility to attract a family audience in the United States and considered giving it a limited release in select cities. Before releasing it in select cities, Disney decided to release it under their
Touchstone Pictures Touchstone Pictures, Inc. was an American film production label of Walt Disney Studios, founded and owned by The Walt Disney Company. Feature films released under the Touchstone label were produced and financed by Walt Disney Studios, and featu ...
label as they felt this film had some mature themes for an ordinary Disney film. As opposed to releasing it in the United States with subtitles leaving the original French dialogue in, Disney hired many cartoon voice-over actors to dub the original French dialogue out and substitute it with an English language format. They also gave the film an American name, ''Little Indian, Big City''. Under its new Americanized title and language dubbing, Touchstone finally released it to a select American audience on March 22, 1996.


Reception


Box office

The film grossed 21 million Franc ($3.9 million) in its opening week in France, finishing second behind '' The Lion King''. It remained in second place for two more weeks before moving to number one for four weeks, grossing $35 million in its first 9 weeks and being the highest-grossing film of the year. The film flopped during its American release; the film opened in 545 theaters in the United States, but eventually only grossed $1,029,731 in the US and Canada theatrically.


Critical reception

Upon its original American release many American critics had an extremely harsh reaction to the film.
Roger Ebert Roger Joseph Ebert (; June 18, 1942 – April 4, 2013) was an American film critic, film historian, journalist, screenwriter, and author. He was a film critic for the ''Chicago Sun-Times'' from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, Ebert beca ...
awarded ''Little Indian, Big City'' a rare "Zero Stars" rating and called it one of the worst films ever made and that he "detested every moronic minute of it", saying that he was annoyed by the awful dubbing as well as the writing and what he perceived as terrible humor. He ended his original '' Chicago Sun Times'' newspaper review by saying "If you under any circumstances see ''Little Indian, Big City'', I will never let you read one of my reviews again". Ebert's colleague
Gene Siskel Eugene Kal Siskel (January 26, 1946 – February 20, 1999) was an American film critic and journalist for the ''Chicago Tribune''. Along with colleague Roger Ebert, he hosted a series of movie review programs on television from 1975 until his d ...
also deplored the film saying that it was likely to be a candidate for the year's (or any year's) worst film. He also said that if the word for the film got big enough in the United States family audiences would have been "hoodwinked into paying to see a totally unprofessional movie." When Siskel and Ebert viewed the film during its original theatrical release, one of the film reels broke out and the third reel of film was missing. A film executive informed Siskel and Ebert that they were allowed to come back the following week and view the particular reel. Siskel and Ebert came back to view the third reel, and by the time they had concluded viewing the whole film Siskel was quoted as saying, "If it was the legendary missing footage from ''
The Magnificent Ambersons ''The Magnificent Ambersons'' is a 1918 novel by Booth Tarkington, the second in his ''Growth'' trilogy after ''The Turmoil'' (1915) and before ''The Midlander'' (1923, retitled ''National Avenue'' in 1927). It won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction ...
'', this movie would still suck." Both Siskel and Ebert later went on to claim this as one of the worst motion pictures they had ever seen (though it's not on Ebert's "Most Hated Films" list), and in January 1997, on Siskel and Ebert's "Worst of the Year" program for 1996, Ebert went on to call ''Little Indian, Big City'' the second worst film of the year, just behind '' Mad Dog Time''. Peter Stack of the '' San Francisco Chronicle'' said that the dub "lends tackiness to an already inept comedy." A critic from the rival ''
San Francisco Examiner The ''San Francisco Examiner'' is a newspaper distributed in and around San Francisco, California, and published since 1863. Once self-dubbed the "Monarch of the Dailies" by then-owner William Randolph Hearst, and flagship of the Hearst Corporat ...
'' newspaper stated that "the real trouble with this movie is that it isn't even funny. As directed by Herve Palud and written by Palud and Igor Aptekman, it's a feathery thing that does not show off Lhermitte's considerable allure and gifts as a comic. In this movie, he looks like a dope whose mouth is moving in a distinctly French manner, inexplicably spouting the words of some uninspired American goof." Janet Maslin of '' The New York Times'' further brutalized the production: "Whatever may have been funny - possibly nothing - about the popular French comedy ..American audiences can watch it vanish before their eyes. This film has been dubbed into English so dreadfully that it becomes a discordant horror. Though the actors, including Thierry Lhermitte, Arielle Dombasle and Miou Miou, show faint visual signs of gentleness and civility, they now have now become crassly Americanized boors on the film's painful audio track." James Berardinelli opened his review with a paragraph which read, "''Little Indian, Big City'', the American name given to Herve Palud's 1995 French fish-out-of-water comedy, ''L'Indian dans la Ville'', is easily one of the most tedious viewing experiences of 1996. I came as close to walking out of this movie as anything I have ever watched. No one, no matter how desperate they are for family entertainment, should be subjected to the indignity of sitting through this ninety-minute excuse for a motion picture." As of today, Rotten Tomatoes gives this film a score of 13% based on 8 reviews.


Home media

It was later released on home video under the VHS format in early 1997 and was re-issued one other time on VHS in mid-1998. The film has not been released on DVD, Blu-ray or any other video formats in the United States.


Official Comic Book

The film was also adapted into a comic book by Vincent Deporter and his wife Judith Rucar. * Titl
MIMI SIKU - UN INDIEN DANS LA VILLE
* Author
Hervé Palud Hervé is a French language, French masculine given name of Breton language, Breton origin, from the name of the 6th-century Breton Saint Hervé. The common latinization of the name is Herveus (also ''Haerveus''), an early (8th-century) latinizati ...
- Vincent Deporter - Judith Rucar * Publisher Glénat, 1994 * ,


External links

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Notes and references

{{DEFAULTSORT:Indien dans la ville, Un 1994 films French adventure comedy films Films set in Venezuela 1990s French-language films 1990s adventure comedy films Films about hunter-gatherers Films adapted into comics 1994 comedy films Films directed by Hervé Palud Touchstone Pictures films 1990s French films