Camping Cosmos is a 1996 Belgian satirical comedy film and a sequel to La Vie sexuelle des Belges 1950-1978, directed by the same director: Jan Bucquoy.
Cosmos refers to the eternity of heaven in full contrast with this little campsite where so many people live together with their problems and limited view of the world.
[1] In the summer of 1986,[1] on a campsite on the Belgian coast where everybody wants to live in complete freedom and forget the obligations of everyday life, Jan Bucquoy, the delegate of the Ministry of Culture, must bring culture nearer to the working class.
He presents things like Bertolt Brecht's play, Mother Courage and Her Children, or an interview with the famous writer Pierre Mertens, but the vacationers at this caravan park are more interested in low-brow distractions, like soccer, boxing matches or beauty contests, as well as sexual adventures and temporary romances.
[1] The production was entirely in the hands of Transatlantic Films and its director Francis De Smet.