Review: "OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies"

And that's just the tip of the iceberg in Michel Hazanavicius' delightlful French spy send-up, OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies. OSS 117, as played to oily perfection by Jean Dujardin, is like a mash up of James Bond and Jacques Tati's Monsieur Hulot. He is arrogant, ignorant, culturally insensitive, and all around clueless. But he somehow always manages to get the job done, even if it's by accident.
The entire film has the look and feel of an old 1960s spy thriller, right down to the overripe color palate to the rear projection behind cars to create the illusion of movement. Most modern spoofs focus on making ironic pop culture references and lampooning specific films, without ever really capturing the flavor of the genre it is sending up. Hazanavicius perfectly captures the look and feel of these old spy films, while slyly skewering the conventions of the genre.

Which is another point the movie nails very well. Not only is it a genre spoof, but it is a pointed satire of Western ignorance about Middle Eastern culture ("what kind of stupid religion doesn't allow alcohol?" 117 scornfully asks his Muslim secretary after she says drinking is against her religion). The film is never directly political, but it finds great comic material in Western ignorance.

Leave it to the French to show how to do a genre spoof right, because I haven't seen a funnier film all year.
GRADE - *** (out of four)
OSS 117: CAIRO, NEST OF SPIES; Directed by Michel Hazanavicius; Stars Jean Dujardin, Berenice Bejo, Aure Atika, Philippe Lefebvre, Constantine Alexandrov, Said Amadis; Not Rated; In French w/English subtitles
Comments
To be recommended, paces itself well, all the way to the "cat-fight" at the end.
Magnifique!