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8 Reviews
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Thought Provoking Epic Tale,
By Karim Bey "sierrarancher" (Squaw Valley, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
The production of porcelain and cognac are the axis around which this film revolves. The film documents and dramatizes the sacrifice involved in maintaining quality during hard political and personal times. Covering several decades, the film intelligently probes philosophical themes of love, duty, family, and death. The acting is superb. Be aware that the movie is some 3 hours, so allot the time. One of my favorite scenes is the waltz scene; the grace of this dance is captured by the turn of the head of Pauline (Beart).
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Visually Magnificent Tale of the Endurance of Love,
By Grady Harp (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (TOP 50 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
LES DESTINEES is another one of those period pieces that reminds us of how magic cinema can be. Set at the turn of the century the plot revolves around a triangle of two women and a man who rediscover themselves at the cost of the changes the world endured in the time of the great wars. The importance of family is approached in a pungent way, fighting as it does here against the discovery of honest love: how far will a man of means risk his profession and his marriage for the love of an outsider? Though the story has oft been written and told, much of the success of this film lies in the capable acting hands of Isabelle Huppert, Emannuelle Beart, and Charles Berling. Erring on being a bit too long, the technical aspects of this film seamlessly hold your attention - a vital stage for some fine storytelling and acting.
15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Love is everything,
By
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
I read the reviews of quite a few people for this film and would like to comment on certain things omitted from their analysis. For starters, this is a movie about LIFE, so where to start with life? Pick a time zone for the beginning and end of the film. The comment of one intelligent reviewer was that the movie had no "meat" in the beginning or end and that the "meat" was in the middle, but he just doesn't understand that this is merely a movie about life. Why cut out the trip to America? The movie tries to realistically portray business problems and the problems with competing internationally, and it shows how management tried to deal with their problems, and portrayed management as being inept, which happens in life! This reviewer says there is no substance in this movie, but I submit that the reviewer did not pay attention while watching the movie. This is a wonderful movie about life and the problems of life and relationships, and of love that dies, and a man that is brave enough at the end of the film to admit his shortcomings in life and to finally realize that love is everything, and that without love there is nothing, and this comment concludes the movie, while flashing back to the ballroom dancing, in the beginning, in the year 1900, when this couple was young and in love, which gives the movie closure; characters that you don't like are supposed to not be liked!! I liked this movie very much and watch lots of international movies and like French films, and this is one of the best films I've seen in quite some time and gets close to a 10 out of 10 rating in my book. The movie appears to start and end abruptly, but keep in mind that this is only a movie about life, and that the starting point and ending point are merely moments in time.
5.0 out of 5 stars
An intimate epic,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
The story of a man (a very good performance by Charles Berling) over a 30 year period,
starting at the beginning of the 20th century. It explores what matters to him -- the women in his life, his morality, and later his porcelain factory. It poses some important questions; how does one balance morality, passion and being an artist? And when is the pursuit of perfection a vice or a virtue? There are flaws; some interesting plot lines are simply dropped, and other less interesting ones get more time than they need. Isabelle Huppert, while always good is surprisingly a bit one-note, and Emmanuelle Beart can't really pull off being an old lady. But this ultimately felt like more than the sum of its parts. By the end I felt moved and thoughtful, and it's 3 hour length, while deliberate, was never boring. Critics were very divided - some coldly dismissed it as dull and seemed angry at Assayas for betraying his earlier hipper, more energetic films (I'm just impressed by his range), while others, like me, were really taken in by the Dickensian sweep.
4.0 out of 5 stars
not a 5 but close,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
Beautifully shot and directed romance with a beautiful heroine. Emmanuelle Beart. Slow paced, graceful, and scenic. This movie is truly a work of art but a great movie no. Dialogue is vapid, trying to be insightful. I did enjoy it greatly anyway like a piece of museum art.
26 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Love endures--this film will not.,
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
Every story has a beginning, a middle, and an end. In the case of the film "Les Destinees," the beginning is in 1900, and the end arrives three decades later. In the middle is the meat of this film, and this includes:
A scandalous divorce An idyllic soujourn in Switzerland The First World War The fortunes of a porcelain producing family The inside of a swinging Parisian nightclub circa 1930 A religious conversion An adulterous affair The stock market crash of the 1920s The production of several lines of porcelain Cherry picking And I have probably missed a few things... Now while this DVD may last three hours, there is enough material in this film to make a mini-series. This is a sumptuous epic--gorgeous sets, marvellous scenery, wonderful costumes--but somehow or another all these lovely trappings just left me cold. It was like consuming a beautiful but hollow cake--perfect icing, but nothing underneath. The story was just too involved to condense adequately and meaningfully into three hours. There were many scenes that added nothing at all to the main thread of the story--the enduring nature of love. Many of the scenes could have been very comfortably cut from the film--at absolutely no loss to the plot. What was the trip to America all about? It added nothing--except, I suppose, it helped qualify "Les Destinees" as an epic, and the bar scene with all the wild young ones, and the religious conversion. Chop, chop chop--all worthless. Charles Berling was excellent as the minister who dumps the church, but Emmanuelle Beart as his wife, Pauline was too wooden and pouty for my tastes. She trounced around the sets like a little girl. She looks good, but the acting....Now I am going to add here that I usually LOVE French films, and consume a regular diet of foreign films. This was a disappointment. If I rate "Les Destinees" against other French films, I would probably give it two stars, but if I match it against most of the tripe out there, it starts to look better, so for this reason, I am giving it three stars. If you are a French film fan, you may very well be disappointed in this--displacedhuman
6 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
an excellent movie.,
By robert v. musilli (wantagh, new york United States) - See all my reviews
3 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Take a long look at the critical reviews before you buy,
By bookloversfriend (United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Les Destinees (DVD)
What happens when Europeans apply their methods of closet drama to make an "epic"?
You have the usual main characters whom you don't like at first sight and want to get away from as quickly as possible once you get to know them better. You have no action whatever on screen for the entire 165 minutes (not three hours). You have brief glimpses rather than scenes. For instance, WWI is three glimpses, none of which involve battles or anything as vulgar as that. You have a lot of talk, which is believed by the characters and by the filmmaker to be profound and insightful, but which is merely stupid. You have people who are able to manufacture misery out of thin air. Even when they're living in an idyllic Swiss villa with no need to work, they manage to be miserable. You have the work of a factory lovingly portrayed with many, many glimpses. It is sad that people have been made to regard such posturing as art, and even sadder that some people take such sick observations about life seriously. The only profound remark in the entire film is that love is what matters. True, it is; but this film does not illustrate that. Still less does it make the audience feel that. |
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Les Destinees [VHS] by Olivier Assayas (VHS Tape - 2003)
$14.98 $14.23
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