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Les Visiteurs 2 Les Couloirs Du Temps Xerxes [NEWEST — 2025]
The character of Xerxes, played with unhinged joy by Jean-Pierre Clami, remains a high-water mark for comedic historical figures in cinema. He is absurd, terrifying, and pathetic all at once. When he finally disappears back into the corridors of time, you almost miss him. Almost. Les Visiteurs 2 : Les Couloirs du temps is a messy, chaotic, brilliant film. It asks the question: What happens when you open too many doors in time? The answer: You get Xerxes demanding tax returns from a medieval lord inside a 20th-century hypermarket.
For fans of French comedy, the name "Xerxes" is shorthand for glorious, unapologetic silliness. So the next time you watch Godefroy struggle with a fork or Jacquouille discover electricity, remember the scene in the Persian throne room. Remember the jewels, the beard, and the rage. And raise a glass (of "Pleine de Vie," naturally) to the one and only King Xerxes—the most unexpectedly hilarious tyrant in French film history. les visiteurs 2 les couloirs du temps xerxes
Godefroy is proud and stubborn. Xerxes is infinitely more so. When Jacquouille (having switched back) sneaks into the Persian palace to retrieve the crystal fragment, he accidentally insults the king’s beard. Xerxes’ response—to order the execution of every bald man in the empire—is a perfect comedic escalation. It mirrors the medieval absurdity (like Jacquouille being sentenced to the guillotine for refusing to pay TV license tax) but on an epic, historical scale. The character of Xerxes, played with unhinged joy
This is where the film transforms from a simple medieval-fish-out-of-water story into a sprawling, tri-temporal farce. When film historians discuss Les Visiteurs 2 , the name "Xerxes" triggers a distinct response: a mix of laughter and confusion. The character appears for only a handful of scenes, yet his presence looms over the entire second act. Who is this Xerxes? Almost
Xerxes, not understanding the science of temporal displacement, interprets this as an act of war by a "king of the barbarians from the North" (the Franks). Enraged, he declares a holy decree: he will build a second set of "Couloirs" (corridors) – not of time, but of conquest – to find this Godefroy. On paper, pitting a 11th-century French knight against a 5th-century B.C. Persian king is nonsense. But Les Visiteurs 2 is a film that runs on nonsense—high-octane, logically consistent nonsense. Here is why the Xerxes subplot is comedic genius: