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Film / Deux heures moins le quart avant Jésus-Christ

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Deux heures moins le quart avant Jésus-Christ (Quarter To Two B.C.) is a 1982 French comedy (in the form of a Sword and Sandal parody) film directed by Jean Yanne, starring Coluche, Michel Serrault and Jean Yanne.

Julius Caesar spends his holiday in a Roman colony of Northern Africa, where he will meet Cleopatra. The shopkeepers of the town are angry against Caesar because of the rising oats price and the future creation of a supermarket in the circus. They appoint Ben-Hur Marcel, a garage owner, as their spokesperson and they start a demonstration.


Deux heures moins le quart avant Jésus-Christ provides examples of:

  • Ancient Rome: The film is set in a Roman colony of Northern Africa, in the time of Julius Caesar and Cleopatra VII.
  • Arab Oil Sheikh: Arab oat sheikhs are having a meeting in town. They play big money at the casino.
  • Camp Gay: Julius Caesar is gay and it is very difficult not to notice it because of the way he speaks and his effeminate gestures.note  Other gay characters behave similarly.
  • Chariot Race: Subverted. The first event of the circus games. Ben-Hur Marcel's competitors withdraw before the start of the race.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?:
    • The rising oats price and the meeting of oat producers is an obvious reference to the rising oil price and OPEC meetings.
    • The Crimson Brigades ("Brigades pourpres") that plot an attack against Caesar is a reference to the Red Brigades, an Italian far-left terrorist organization.
  • Fed to the Beast: Subverted. After the demonstration, Ben-Hur Marcel is arrested and he is going to be fed to the lion, but the consul finally decides to use him as a mole.
  • Food End: In the end, the main characters take part in a banquet.
  • Gladiator Games: Subverted. During the circus games, Ben-Hur Marcel must fight the gladiators and the lion. The gladiators start a strike before the fight. The lion has eaten so much canned meat that he cannot move.
  • Got Volunteered: Ben-Hur Marcel suggests that the shopkeepers should have a spokesperson. The other shopkeepers agree with him and Ben-Hur Marcel ends up being appointed as spokesperson.
  • Has a Type: Caesar is repeatedly attracted to little fat men.
  • Historical Domain Character: Julius Caesar and Cleopatra VII, of course.
  • Hypercompetent Sidekick: The consul is far more competent than Caesar and he seems to do all the governing work by himself.
  • It Will Never Catch On: In the end, a newscaster announces that a child was born in a manger in Bethlehem. Ben-Hur Marcel complains about the TV news only showing unimportant events. He then asks if a child born in a manger could change the face of the world.
  • King Incognito: Caesar goes to a gay club incognito. Ben-Hur Marcel meets him and does not realize that he is the powerful Caesar.
  • Long-Lost Relative: Cleopatra discovers that Ben-Hur Marcel is actually her long-lost brother, Amineméphèt.
  • Mistaken for Prostitute: A centurion finds Cleopatra in an evening dress at the garage of Ben-Hur Marcel. He arrests her because he thinks that she is a prostitute.
  • The Mole: The consul asks Ben-Hur Marcel to infiltrate a conspiracy against Caesar. Ben-Hur Marcel ends up in a gay club and does not accomplish his mission.
  • Moses in the Bulrushes: The pharaoh abandoned his son Amineméphèt in a cradle on the river. The baby was adopted by a garage owner and named Ben-Hur Marcel.
  • Newscaster Cameo: Yves Mourousi, who was a newscaster in the 1980's, appears as TV-program presenter. Léon Zitrone, another journalist, plays the role of a sports commentator during the sequence of the circus games.
  • One Dialogue, Two Conversations: Caesar and Ben-Hur Marcel have a long conversation. Caesar thinks they are talking about homosexuality, while Ben-Hur Marcel thinks they are talking about a conspiracy to kill Caesar. The confusion arises from the loud music in the gay club.
  • Orphan's Plot Trinket: Ben-Hur Marcel was adopted by a garage owner. He owns a papyrus with a portrait of a pharaoh. The papyrus was found in his cradle.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: Caesar dons a wig and a fake moustache to go to the gay club incognito.
  • Parody: The film poster is a parody of the poster of Ben Hur (1959).
  • Purely Aesthetic Era: The story is set in the Ancient Rome, but there are televisions, advertisements, garages, gay clubs, canned animal food, phone booths, no parking signs...
  • Queer People Are Funny: The homosexuality of Julius Caesar and the stereotyped gay club are used as sources of humour.
  • Really Royalty Reveal: Ben-Hur Marcel, a garage owner, is revealed to be the son of a pharaoh and the sister of Cleopatra.
  • Right in Front of Me: Ben-Hur Marcel does not recognize Caesar when they meet in the gay club and finally says that he wants to get involved into a conspiracy to murder the Roman dictator. Caesar immediately orders to arrest him.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: A crowd of shopkeepers demonstrates with Ben-Hur Marcel against Caesar, but when the Roman soldiers show up, they all get away, and Ben-Hur Marcel is left alone and arrested.
  • Unusual Pets for Unusual People: Queen Cleopatra always travels with her monkey and her two falcons. Everybody knows that, except a centurion.
  • Where Everybody Knows Your Flame: There is a stereotyped gay club in the catacombs of the town (with loud electronic music, people dressed in leather...).

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