From the very first moment we meet Andre, we are introduced to a man of many fascinating contradictions. He’s audacious, punk rock, has a bit of a bad drug problem, has an irreverent sense of humor, and is just capable enough at what he does. He doesn’t seem to want much at the end of the day. Good friends, good food, and a good laugh, and he seems satisfied. Andre is a little off-kilter, and he prefers to live his life a little differently than most. And as it turns out, that includes his death as well.
We learn a lot about Andre very early in the film. We learn that he fell into advertising, kind of on a whim, and just so happened to be pretty good at it. We learn that he married his bartender so she could get a green card, and they ended up falling in love and having two kids. We also learn that his kids refer to him by his first name, and they don’t really hug much. And we also learn that Andre is dying from stage four colon cancer.
Andre is an Idiotis many things at once. It is the slow process of dying and grieving. It is a celebration of a life lived. It is a comedy sketch. It is one man’s last hurrah on this planet. It is almost a grotesque, voyeuristic insight into a person’s final days. It is also a testament to the value and veracity of the power of the human spirit. And maybe most importantly, it is a PSA for every man over 40 to get their effing colonoscopy.
Courtesy of Joint Venture
Andre is called an idiot by his mom because colon cancer is one of the easiest cancers to treat if caught early. He even had a friend who suggested going to get a colonoscopy together a year prior, which Andre, of course, refused. This becomes one of the major focuses of the film, as anyone out there who may be too uneasy about someone peeking in your rectum. It’s an uncomfortable 20 minutes, or it’s the end of your life. Should be an easy decision.
The film, and Andre for that matter, uses humor quite often. Not as a crutch or a shield, but as a way of looking at the world and his place in it. Throughout the film, Andre narrates several comedic scenarios set to animation, whether it’s a character he makes out of his hair falling out or a game show idea about people picking better ways to kill him other than cancer. These moments are both humorous and somber as they reflect his refusal to be sad about his impending death, but also his refusal to allow anybody else to be sad about it either.
Courtesy of Joint Venture
For everyone else, they are going through the 7 stages of grief, but Andre got past denial and bargaining pretty early. He’s halfway through acceptance, and we’ve only reached the 30-minute mark. The rest of the film feels like everyone else catching up, and Andre is slowing down to let them.
As far as the humor goes, there’s one moment that is genuinely played for laughs, and it’s when Andre and his friends in advertising come up with a clever ad campaign to get more people to get a colonoscopy check. They use different objects that look similar to butt holes as a way of connecting the two. The imagery and the message use humor in a clever way to highlight not only Andre’s view of the world, but also to leave a lasting impression on the world before he goes.
Andre is an Idiot is ultimately a sad story. We are watching a man slowly wither and die before us, but he never stops smiling, he never stops laughing, and he eventually learns to hug his kids. It’s a tender portrait of a man, his life, and his choices, some great, others quite idiotic. But it’s a life with love, no matter what. And it’s one we could all take more than one lesson from.
Andre Is An Idiot is currently playing in select theaters in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco courtesy of Joint Venture. The film will continue to expand over the coming weeks.
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9.0
Andre is an Idiot is ultimately a sad story. It’s a tender portrait of a man, his life, and his choices, some great, others quite idiotic. But it’s a life with love, no matter what. And it’s one we could all take more than one lesson from.
Phoenix is a father of two, the co-host and editor of the Curtain to Curtain Podcast, co-founder of the International Film Society Critics Association. He’s also a member of the Pandora International Critics, Independent Critics of America, Online Film and Television Association, and Film Independent. With the goal of eventually becoming a filmmaker himself. He’s also obsessed with musical theater.