Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Prime Target
  • Fragments of Us
  • Sapir
  • Sandbag Dam
  • Rains Over Babel
  • Midnight in Bali
  • Gai(e), tu ne seras point
  • Elementary
  • Garbo: Where Did You Go?
  • Bikechess
  • Act Up Ou Le Chaos
  • One of Them Days
  • Presence
  • Clean Slate
  • Somewhere in Love
  • Endless
  • Halloween Ball (The)
  • In Ashes
  • Bad Reputation
  • Akin's Desert
  • Quir
  • Parque de diversões
  • Odd Fish
  • Moment for Love (A)
  • Love Me
  • Under the Southern Cross: The Art and Legacy of Henry L. Faulkner
  • Those Who Wait
  • Found Photo (The)
  • Surfacing
  • Armand
  • Bliss
  • Cheers to Life
  • Full Support
  • Who Wants to Marry an Astronaut?
  • Queer Church
  • Better Man
  • Fugue
  • Frikis (Los)
  • Blue for a Boy
  • Best Friend (The)

My Sweet Little Ass

Country: Switzerland, Language: German, 105 mins

Original Title

Mon Beau Petit Cul
  • Director: Simon Bischoff
  • Writer: Simon Bischoff
  • Producer: Simon Bischoff

CGiii Comment

A dirty old, obnoxious man talks endlessly about his sex life...with young Moroccan boys.

Why anyone would want to make a film about this vile little man is beyond logic.

Why anyone would want to watch a film about this grubby little man is tragic.

Thoroughlly distasteful, thoroughly disdainful...if will leave you feeling dirty.

Horrible...from start to finish.


No trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

The film's principal character is Jean Neuenschwander, who left his home in French-speaking Switzerland in 1956 for Canada, where he was soon appointed manager of a large luxury hotel in Vancouver. In 1971, he bought a house in Tangiers where he settled down a few years later, at the age of 51, for a cosy and opulent retirement. “My Sweet Little Ass” is the account of his personal life, which Jean Neuenschwander clearly takes delight in recounting. He is a likeable hedonist who manages his affairs and his pleasures with considerable skill. From this somewhat comfortable existence, Simon Bischoff subtly extracts a group portrait of the homosexual subculture of Tangiers, which for some has the power of myth, particulary when frequented by characters such as Paul Bowles.

Cast & Characters

Paul Bowles as Himself;
Patricia Mynott as Herself;
Jean Neuenschwander as Himself