Welcome to the Sticks
Welcome to the Sticks
| 20 February 2008 (USA)
Welcome to the Sticks Trailers

Although living a comfortable life in Salon-de-Provence, a charming town in the South of France, Julie has been feeling depressed for a while. To please her, Philippe Abrams, a post office administrator, her husband, tries to obtain a transfer to a seaside town, on the French Riviera, at any cost. The trouble is that he is caught red-handed while trying to scam an inspector. Philippe is immediately banished to the distant unheard of town of Bergues, in the Far North of France...

Reviews
Matcollis This Movie Can Only Be Described With One Word.
Murphy Howard I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
Clarissa Mora The tone of this movie is interesting -- the stakes are both dramatic and high, but it's balanced with a lot of fun, tongue and cheek dialogue.
Scarlet The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
gra-39317 Bienvenue chez les Ch'Tis is a French comedy film about a dishonest post office manager who is sent to the "dreaded" north of France for a job transfer. The movie focuses on stereotypes as Philippe Abrams, the main character, slowly warms up to the region and its people. While this movie does have some chuckle worthy one-liners, there is not much else to make this movie likable. The characters are meant to be charming, but they tend to fall flat due to poor acting and a bland plot. Most of the jokes are based off the main characters being drunk, while the rest of the movie is predictable and cliché- at almost every scene, what is coming next is as clear as day. The actors didn't have good dynamics with each other, and it seemed like the romantic leads were just paired together with no thought to on-screen chemistry. Overall, this movie is not worth watching despite its occasional amusing moment.
ericmarseille Warning : spoilerFact : this film has puzzled the critics, the international audience as well as the intellectual Parisian establishment with its phenomenal success (I mean, with the French public)...Why, but oh why, has this unpretentious, rather funny comedy, OK, been such a blockbuster?Mystery revealed : The French, who are sourpusses, egoistical, cold hearted, hypocritical people (I am one!), KNOW, all of them, that a gem of a people lives way, way up in the gloomy, rainy, barren north of the country : the Ch'tis. Up there, dire life conditions and the common destiny of working generation after generation in the coal mines (now closed) and textile mills (now also closed) gave way to the most humane, the kindest-hearted, the most equal of the French, and maybe of the Europeans.All the French know at least the two first verses of this Enrico Macias -a North African Jew!- song : "People of the North have in the eyes the blue that their setting is lacking, people of the North have in their heart the sun that they don't have outside" I've personally known a Ch'ti family who used to leave their door open all day in the worst suburb of Paris ; one of my wife's acquaintances told her how, when she was a kid, she and her friends, roaming the streets of their mining city, would simply enter any home, at random, through its already opened door, and just had to say "we're hungry" or "we're thirsty" to be regaled with waffles and apple juice, all of them, always (and remember that these people were the poorest)...Dany Boon himself describes how, as she moved to the North, one of his friends stopped passers-by who were picking her furniture up from inside the truck, in fear that they were stealing her belongings, when in fact they were spontaneously helping her...She just couldn't fathom that!Oh yes, the Normands are cool, the Bretons are serious, the Alsacians are hard-working, the Southwesterners are tough, the Provençals are jolly, the Auvergnats are thrifty, and the Corsicans...Well, forget it. OK, OK...But the heart of gold belongs to the Ch'tis, although they live in the worst environment, the worst climate, the worst unemployment, everybody knows that in France, and this film lifts part of the shroud around this enduring mystery, hence its phenomenal success.There! Fascination explained!Now about the story : a small-ranking Manager from the French Postal Service, married to a disenchanted but beautiful wife and living in Provence, though not yet on the Riviera, understanding that only disabled employees can have a chance to move out there, tries to con his way by faking disability, gets caught (hilarious scene), and is sent, as a disciplinary measure, where nobody in France wants to go, the gloomy, desperate North...What region? Simply that : the North, it's the region name, a program in itself (Michel Galabru, hilarious as a Provençal who lived the northern freezing hell for a while in his childhood, simply states "ThaaaAAAt's the NoooooOOrr!") ; for fear of aggravating his wive's depression, he goes alone with the promise to return home on every week-end.At first, everything fits in his gloomy scenario : gloomy climate, gloomy urban landscapes, incomprehensible people speaking a bastardized dialect, smelly cheese dipped in the (YUCK!) morning coffee (in fact curled endive decoction, one other northern specialty)...But little by little, he is tipped over by the kindness of the people ; only, this is a double-edged sword, for the more his wife believes he is living in hell, the more affectionate and amorous she gets...Finally, our hero is living the best of both worlds, happy at work and happy at home, by lying blatantly about his everyday life...Alas, alas, his wife, realizing how egoistical she's been until then, decides to join him in exile...And then...Ah, better let you see the film!Overall : a very good film, sometimes emotional, sometimes funny, sometimes really hilarious.
Imdbidia A light and simple comedy about a Post Office employee who is transferred to a position in North of France -in a region with linguistic and character particularities- in punishment for some misbehavior at work, leaving his family behind. What at first seems a curse, becomes little by little a very good life.This a movie in which the French self-deprecate themselves, or at least one of their regions, but with great acceptance and love. That's always a healthy exercise and very propitious to get some laughs especially if you see the movie without dubbing.This is an enjoyable, funny and entertaining movie played by the usual actors lately in vogue in French cinema, all good in their respective roles.
barrowa A year ago, exploring northern France after attending a 2CV rally, my wife and I came across the charming town of Bergues. 'Bienvenu...' had just been released and the town was swarming with tourists and advertisements for the film. A few weeks later we caught the film in England, when it played at our local 'art' cinema. The film's a delight. We've just borrowed it on DVD and it again reduced us to tears of laughter; a warm, funny film about the destruction of pomposity and prejudice and the value of that most important of human relationships, friendship. Great slapstick moments and English subtitles that reflect the word play arising from the interplay between the slushy local dialect - Ch'ti - and French. See the film, then visit the town - both are delightful.
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