Ducobu and the Ghost of Saint-Potache is ready to crash cinemas on October 7, 2026, and the Saint-Potache crew is back for a Halloween adventure packed full of ghosts, pumpkins, school pranks, and classroom madness. Élie Semoun revealed the film poster for the famous dunce’s next big screen chapter, and this one marks his final Ducobu film as filmmaker and actor. The cast reunites Élie Semoun, Émilie Caen, Frédérique Bel, and Loïc Legendre, while Gérard Jugnot joins for a guest appearance. The franchise is leaning straight into spooky comedy, and Saint-Potache is about to trade ordinary school trouble for haunted-house insanity.
Ducobu and the Ghost of Saint-Potache Unleashes Halloween Trouble
The poster screams Halloween from every corner, thanks to a haunted house, pumpkins, skeleton imagery, a full moon, and spooky schoolyard mayhem. The slogan says, “He’s every teacher’s worst nightmare!” and that line basically nails the entire vibe. Ducobu is back in trouble, and this new chapter swaps standard classroom disasters for supernatural nonsense. Saint-Potache earns the creepy comedy treatment, and the franchise knows exactly what families crave.
This film fires the famous dunce into a mystery packed adventure full of laughs, pranks, and ghostly trouble. Halloween hands the saga a fresh playground, because the usual teacher headaches now have paranormal company. Professor Latouche and Miss Rateau already sound like a recipe for comic disaster, and the haunted house adds a wild new layer. The result sounds like classic Ducobu mischief upgraded for spooky season.
Anatole The Ghost Is Causing Saint-Potache Mayhem
The story centers on Professor Latouche and Miss Rateau after they relocate to a house haunted by Anatole, the biggest dunce in Saint-Potache school history. That detail alone is bonkers enough to sell the entire film, because Ducobu meeting a legendary ghost dunce is comedy bait. Anatole is mischievous, unpredictable, and ready to drag the school crew into one ridiculous escapade after another. Ducobu, Léonie, their parents, and Kitrish all tumble into the mess.
This is still the saga families know, packed full of school antics, pranks, exhausted teachers, and students caught in a situation bigger than homework. The ghost plot adds mystery, but the heart of the film keeps classroom comedy and family fun. Élie Semoun is closing his Ducobu run by giving Saint-Potache a supernatural twist that fits the franchise’s playful madness. The film keeps Ducobu in the middle of every messy laugh.
Ducobu and the Ghost of Saint-Potache Introduces Fresh Young Talent
The film also spotlights a new wave of young cast members, adding fresh faces to the franchise’s family comedy formula. Charlie plays Ducobu, Antoinette portrays Léonie, and Yasmine plays Carine. Gustavia Harfouch is spotlighted among the standout young revelations of the cast. Circé and Joé also join the lineup, giving the school universe extra youthful electricity.
The cast mix is vital because the Ducobu saga grew famous for that teacher-versus-student madness. The first film, Ducobu the Student, opened in France on June 22, 2011, and the first five films passed 6 million cumulative admissions. This final Semoun-helmed entry is aiming straight for families, kids, longtime fans, and anyone craving goofy Halloween cinema. Ducobu is back, and teachers everywhere may need a survival plan.




