Comédie-Française 2026

De la Comédie-Française

Directed by Martin Darondeau, Bertrand Usclat Widescreen

Drunk actors, cursed props, clashing egos and a Macbeth that refuses to come together… a gloriously chaotic love letter to theatre and everyone mad enough to make it.

France In French with English subtitles
75 minutes
TBC

Producer

Mathieu Verhaeghe, Thomas Verhaeghe

Screenplay

Pauline Clément, Clémence Dargent, Martin Darondeau, Bertrand Usclat

Cinematography

Hugo Paturel

Production Designer

Sébastien Danos

Music

Clément Ducol

Cast

Pauline Clément, Laurent Stocker, Julien Frison, Marina Hands, Adeline D’Hermy

Elsewhere

Filmed at the prestigious Comédie-Française theatre and using actual members of the troupe, the feature got its original start as an attempted series of skits during the pandemic era.

We’re taken behind the scenes to experience the journey of Nina (Pauline Clément), an experienced actress who is taking a turn in the director's chair to stage a performance of Macbeth. Unfortunately for Nina, the play is cursed from the outset and everything that could go wrong, does. Malfunctioning props, intoxicated actors, infidelity, clashing egos, absent cast members, overzealous security staff and even parental mishaps all clash in the frantic three hours before the play begins. But as the old saying goes "the show must go on" and Nina must battle fate and hold everything together in order to deliver a performance that is still worthy of the famed theatre institute.

The title directly translates to "French Comedy" and the film certainly lives up to its moniker. An uproarious, gag-filled farce that is a gleeful parody of theatre antics and a much needed piece of joyous escapism.

- Jordan Saloman