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 virtue of including Xerxes is that it elevates the stakes beyond a simple family squabble. Godefroy isn't just fighting to fix his bloodline; he is fighting to prevent a temporal paradox where Persian culture overwrites Merovingian France. The film toys with the idea of the "Grandfather Paradox" but replaces it with the "Xerxes Paradox": What if the king who burned Athens showed up at a Carrefour? For years, critics dismissed Les Visiteurs 2 as inferior to the original. But in the age of the MCU and multiverse storytelling (e.g., Everything Everywhere All at Once ), this 1998 film looks prophetic. It understood that time travel is not about history; it is about collision . And no collision is more satisfying than watching a Persian king, dripping in gold, scream at a French peasant about a stolen magic rock. les visiteurs 2 les couloirs du temps xerxes
Historically, Xerxes I was the fourth King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire, famous for his massive invasion of Greece (immortalized in the film 300 ). In Les Visiteurs 2 , however, he is something far more delightful: a petty, vain, easily manipulated despot who becomes an unwitting pawn in the time-travel chaos. Godefroy is proud and stubborn