Another comic experience by Mr. Andrisan revolving very, very secret agent Cochon, following the leads to solve a clue: the famous recipe
for the delicious Sarmale, a special Romanian food every powers in the world want it but no one seems to get it (or those who get it, make the meal
but always something happens). And Cochon also tracks down a big-butted female agent he's obsessed for his own personal reasons.
Again, the smartest agent in the world, only behind James Bond, encounters a series of other agents and random people who all have a similar mission as his in getting the recipe, and they either distract the man from his goal or they inform the most insane and unusual things you can ever imagine. And that's where our fun and enjoyment lies. Regular actor on Andrisan projects, Nick Field, steals the show with one important scene as a drunk coroner. That sequence had my dying.
I need to salute, once again, the soundtrack of his films. This time it wasn't used much of his conventional score, it was included many known pieces from classical music, film scores, reggae and pop which heightein the hilarity of it all when they pop on any single scene. The use of Strauss during Cochon's introduction has to be one of the most iconic cinematic moments in film history that needs to be seen by anyone in this day and age.
Intense, funny and impressive, you never know what's gonna happen next. Like Cochon himself, totally unexpected and the only thing we can expect from him and his mates are all the laughter they can gives us. 7/10.
Again, the smartest agent in the world, only behind James Bond, encounters a series of other agents and random people who all have a similar mission as his in getting the recipe, and they either distract the man from his goal or they inform the most insane and unusual things you can ever imagine. And that's where our fun and enjoyment lies. Regular actor on Andrisan projects, Nick Field, steals the show with one important scene as a drunk coroner. That sequence had my dying.
I need to salute, once again, the soundtrack of his films. This time it wasn't used much of his conventional score, it was included many known pieces from classical music, film scores, reggae and pop which heightein the hilarity of it all when they pop on any single scene. The use of Strauss during Cochon's introduction has to be one of the most iconic cinematic moments in film history that needs to be seen by anyone in this day and age.
Intense, funny and impressive, you never know what's gonna happen next. Like Cochon himself, totally unexpected and the only thing we can expect from him and his mates are all the laughter they can gives us. 7/10.