Martin est professeur de philosophie en pleine crise de la quarantaine. Manquant de sens ou de but dans sa vie, il entame une liaison avec Cécilia, une jeune artiste modèle qui aurait pu tue... Tout lireMartin est professeur de philosophie en pleine crise de la quarantaine. Manquant de sens ou de but dans sa vie, il entame une liaison avec Cécilia, une jeune artiste modèle qui aurait pu tuer son ancien amant.Martin est professeur de philosophie en pleine crise de la quarantaine. Manquant de sens ou de but dans sa vie, il entame une liaison avec Cécilia, une jeune artiste modèle qui aurait pu tuer son ancien amant.
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 5 nominations au total
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSophie Guillemin's debut.
- Citations
Sophie: Abstinence is turning you sour; give it up.
Martin: I have.
Sophie: Really? Do I know her?
Martin: No, I met her in odd circumstances a few weeks ago.
Sophie: Really? You must be pleased.
Martin: You're quite wrong, I don't like her at all. She's totally uninteresting. I'm trying to get rid of her.
Sophie: Why? Is she ugly?
Martin: Not particularly.
Sophie: Is she stupid then?
Martin: No. Not at all. She never says anything stupid. It's complicated. She bores me. I have no contact with her. Or rather only physical contact.
Sophie: Why complain? That's not so bad.
Martin: You can't imagine how basic she is, she has no conversation. When she speaks, she sounds silent. Her only means of expression is sexual.
- ConnexionsReferences Jade (1988)
- Bandes originalesMelao de Cana
Performed by Celia Cruz with Sonora Matancera (as La Sonora Matancera)
Written by Hippolita Pedroso
Edition Originale EDITORA MUSICAL DE CUbA
Sous éditions J. GARZON
© DECLIC
Such is the relationship between Martin and Cécilia in this wonderful movie. I say wonderful because although this premise doesn't sound too entertaining throughout almost two hours, I was really amazed and didn't feel l'ennui boredom at any phase of the film. Beyond the sex scenes (Sophie Guillemin looks really great, I must say ) and the endless interrogations Martin subjects Cécilia to, the action somehow unfolds and unfolds and in the end we know that we have not only seen a philosophical love film like `Before Sunrise' but a real STORY, a unified whole.
Martin's character is precisely copied from real life by author Alberto Moravia and perfectly portrayed by Charles Berling. This kind of man, apparently philosophical, but actually egocentric, possessive and concerned only about himself, is in my opinion the only realistic modern kind of man who is worth building a fictitious story around. Of course, this story shows, with Martin, mainly the negative qualities of the `generation X'-man.
Cécilia's character holds some problems for me. Obviously, Cédric Kahn is one of those filmmakers whose movies are perfect entertainment, but you're not allowed to think about them later because you catch on things that are truly unconvincing but would destroy the whole movie if you changed them: the person of Cécilia is like Helena in the Greek mythology. She cannot exist in reality. She is just an ideal, completely freed from every kind of feeling or humanity. She answers to Martin's questions eagerly and tirelessly and she has hardly any opinion about anything and that's what drives him crazy that's what the whole movie is built upon. But a Greek Helena doesn't fit into the amazingly realistic world the movie shows: it's impossible to imagine that she had a life before the beginning of the film and will have one after the end.
By focusing on Martin and his view alle the time, Cédric Kahn is able to prevent us from realizing this while watching and that's a plus for him. However, it is a remarkable flaw in a movie I enjoyed very much. It's a little bit like in `The Sixth Sense': Show one more scene, and the whole movie becomes senseless.
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 36 666 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 14 064 $US
- 10 oct. 1999