It seems that the French comedian wanted to do a different experiment this time as Jad wanted to reconnect with his son again. In order to do so, Jad decides to move to Los Angeles, but he may discover that he has left everything related to his celebrity and special privileges. On the other hand, Jad and Brian decide to make a twisted plan to get Jason out of circulation all day unexpectedly.
At first it might be easy to mistake Huge In France for a gallic exercise in melancholy, but the whimsical Mediterranean-folky score reminds us that this is, in fact a comedy, of the fish-out-of water variety.
Huge in France still isn't quite good enough to justify further investment in what is yet another real-comic-as-semi-dramatic-version-of-themselves series that's less Curb Your Enthusiasm and more Dice meets Really Rob.