Un indien dans la ville

Un indien dans la ville (An Indian in the city) is a 1994 French film directed by Hervé Palud.

Roger Ebert awarded Little Indian, Big City a rare "Zero Stars" rating and called it one of the worst films ever made and that he "detested every moronic minute of it", saying that he was annoyed by the awful dubbing as well as the writing and what he perceived as terrible humor.

He also said that if the word for the film got big enough in the United States family audiences would have been "hoodwinked into paying to see a totally unprofessional movie."

"[9] A critic from the rival San Francisco Examiner newspaper stated that "the real trouble with this movie is that it isn't even funny.

In this movie, he looks like a dope whose mouth is moving in a distinctly French manner, inexplicably spouting the words of some uninspired American goof.

"[10] Janet Maslin of The New York Times further brutalized the production: "Whatever may have been funny - possibly nothing - about the popular French comedy [...] American audiences can watch it vanish before their eyes.

"[11] James Berardinelli opened his review with a paragraph which read, "Little Indian, Big City, the American name given to Herve Palud's 1995 French fish-out-of-water comedy, L'Indian dans la Ville, is easily one of the most tedious viewing experiences of 1996.

Un indien dans la ville was also adapted into a comic book by Vincent Deporter and his wife Judith Rucar.