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Bon Voyage
 
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Bon Voyage (2003)

Starring: Isabelle Adjani, Gérard Depardieu Director: Jean-Paul Rappeneau Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Format: DVD
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)


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Product Details


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Occupied France the subject of a deft, breezy comedy? Believe it. Bon Voyage gathers a collection of romantics, fools, and survivors, and puts them together in Bordeaux in 1940. Loosely arranged around the ditzy figure of a famous grand-dame actress (Isabelle Adjani), these hapless creatures trip over each other very amusingly during the course of a couple of frantic days. The central character is actually a young writer (the winning Gregori Derangere), who's torn between panting after the actress or aiding the pretty daughter (Virginie Ledoyen, 8 Women) of an important scientist trying to escape to England. It would be hard to say that any of this amounts to anything substantial, but director Jean-Paul Rappeneau whips it together very attractively, and the Bordeaux location offers luscious views of a pre-war city. Rappeneau's delightful 1966 comedy La Vie de Chateau, set in Normandy just before D-Day, treads some of the same turf. --Robert Horton


From The New Yorker

An entertaining and frivolous farce mounted on a pedestal of period realism. In Bordeaux in 1940, the remnants of the French government and the Parisian haut monde mill about in the lobby of the deluxe Hotel Splendide. From the start, the movie is a frenzied fashion show of elegant black Citroëns, rakishly conservative double-breasted suits, and plush silk coverlets. The starlet Viviane (Isabelle Adjani) is the hub of the wheel, a femme fatale whose eyelashes brush the vanity of three men haplessly in love with her: the sappy hero, Frédéric (Grégori Derangère), a carefree young writer who has been Viviane's backstairs lover for years; the suave government minister Beaufort (Gérard Depardieu), who can hardly wait to collaborate with the Germans; and Winckler (Peter Coyote), an English journalist who is also a German spy. The movie reminds one of "Casablanca" and other glamorous Hollywood wartime melodramas in which political intrigue flows through love affairs and black-market deals, and everyone rushing about is connected to everyone else. The expert cast knows how to play farce-exaggerate everything, but not too much. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker

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31 Reviews
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 (10)
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 (8)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Intrigue, Chase, Farce as Only the French Can Do It, August 19, 2004
By Grady Harp (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
BON VOYAGE is the brainchild of director Jean-Paul Rappeneau and seems to be a bit of satire on the mega movies of Hollywood, only with a French perspective. The story revolves around a murder in the home of a French movie star diva Viviane (Isabelle Adjani, who just does NOT seem to age!) immediately after the premiere of her latest film. A woman of many trysts and affairs she "acts" her way through obtaining the help of past lovers (from the Minister of the Interior - Gerard Depardieu), an espionage agent Alex (Peter Coyote), and a writer Frederic (the elegant and very fine Gregori Derangere) who responds to the murder and eventually takes the blame and the prison sentence for Viviane. The year shifts to 1940, the Germans are approaching Paris, and the Parisians flee for Bordeaux. In this shuffle one Professor (Jean-Marc Stehle) and his devoted assistant Camille (Virgine Ledoyen) are trying to escape to England with the world's only supply of Heavy Water (a potential ingredient in creating atomic warfare), eluding the Germans who want to confiscate it. Frederic escapes prison, reunites with his lovable sidekick Raoul (Yvan Attal) and the chase ensues! Will Viviane escape Paris safely and which of her manipulated lovers will accompany her? Will the Heavy Water find its way to England? Will Paris/France fall to the Germans or retain its dignity, awaiting the Allied Forces? All of these strings of the great web of intrigue intertwine in the most unexpected ways and it is this interplay that provides the pleasures of this very Hollywood-style broad comedy/epic/action/intrigue movie. The acting is as superb as one would expect from this troop of some of France's cream of the crop actors. A terrific entertainment movie - that happens to have class!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Achingly accurate script, riveting performances. . . 5 stars, March 20, 2005
This film is set in the weeks just before Germany's invasion of France. Pandemonium was (as accurately portrayed in the film) not extreme, yet tension and fear suffused the environment that opened before the French citizen. I found every character in this film far from cliché, and at the same time, very close in personality and behavior to someone that I immediately knew, or had know. Because of this, the film and its characters were intensely engaging.

There's been some grumbling about the historical accuracy and atmosphere of the film...FYI to the naysayers:
Most Historians agree; the occupation of France was the least traumatic German occupation of the Allied Countries in WWII. Why? Because the French military already knew that the Maginot line -- due to its early 30's technology and feeble armaments of an actual defense -- would fall in a matter of days against the German Blitzkrieg. So what did the inhabitants of the Country do? The majority fled to other provinces or stayed as contently occupied citizens, posing no threat to the Germans, except for the resistance -- an 'organized' group of French eccentrics who sought to prevent the destruction of valued paintings and works of art.

With that out of the way, I found the atmosphere of the film as pleasing as a lounge or cafe with phenomenal food and live music at a pleasing decibel, to accompany the experience of visitation.
Allow me to explain. The lighting of the film was neither dark, or overtly decadent, and the cinematography was extremely natural, and very far from stylized.
As far as performances go, wow. In theatre terms, the only overacting in the film was done by Isabelle Adjani, who plays the female sub-protagonist: a flighty, vane, playgirl who through a small teaspoon of intentional satire was conveyed brilliantly.
Gerard Depardieu plays a masterfully subtle Prime Minister of France, and as usual, allowed the strength of his acting to carry him, not exaggerated facials ticks or attention-drawing line delivery.
The young writer and protagonist grew on me as a character, and even the actor who played him seemed to loosen up after the first ten minutes of the film and really slip quietly into his role.

On a side note, I am confused as to why the professional Amazon reviewer made the quip in post-summarization of the films plot elements: "it would be hard to say that any of this amounts to anything substantial," when near the apex of the film, the protagonist has to aid an important scientist in 'smuggling' heavy water, (D20, an aqueous substance with the specific viscosity to control the collision of a neutron with an atomic nucleus) out of the country while receiving trouble from German conspirators in France. Hmm... Someone might not have watched the entire film... It seems ironic, that nothing was more substantial in the 1930's than Heavy Water, literally from a chemistry perspective, or metaphorically from a worldview, since the race to an atomic reaction was a center piece of the war.

For me, because of the reality of the personality of the characters and the manifestation of this through the vehicle of phenomenal acting, I really enjoyed the film. It wasn't anywhere near slow, or historically inaccurate. I laughed at many points during the movie and was happily rattled by the physiognomy and intrigue -- the vibrant hue of the people that colored the mosaic chips of this cinematic achievement.

Plenty of jeopardy, plenty of raucous and subtle hilarity, a cornucopia of riveting performances, and all without sacrificing historical accuracy. What else could you want in a film?

Highly Recommended.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely wonderful, February 19, 2006
By S. E. Fanning (Nashville, TN) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
What more could you ask in a movie? Romance, murder, laughter, deceit, wartime? Oh, right, that's called "Casablanca."

A truly marvelous movie with outstanding production values. Not a franc (or Euro) was spared and it shows.

Isabelle Adjani was 48 when the movie was filmed and plays a character aged all of 25. She looks it, darn her!

Gerard Depardieu make a graceful exit from his movie career and looks magnificent.

"Bon Voyage" is exciting, tense, funny, and bittersweet. Bravo to all!!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Tedious at times
Some slapstick comedy as the Nazis prepare to conquer France in 1940? Yep, but it's all a bit forced, with the usual litany of madcap mistaken motivations. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Bradley F. Smith

5.0 out of 5 stars Fine moviemaking
My wife and I enjoyed this wonderful movie. The acting is superb, the script never dull, and the photography is simply beautiful. You can't go wrong with this one. Read more
Published 11 months ago by True North

5.0 out of 5 stars Listen to Rappeneau's Commentary The Second Time You See This DVD
The first time that I watched this movie, I enjoyed it for its beautiful Art Deco sets and its pre-war fashions as worn by well chosen actors, playing in this 30's style screwball... Read more
Published 11 months ago by C. J. Gillis

3.0 out of 5 stars A very uneven trip
Jean-Paul Rappeneau's disappointing but glossy and lavish comedy melodrama set against the fall of France and the birth of the Vichy government in WW2 always feels on the cusp of... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Trevor Willsmer

2.0 out of 5 stars Not quite a mystery,and not quite a comedy, so "Bon Voyage!"
Using the German Invasion of France in 1940 as a backdrop of historical fact, comes this odd film "Bon Voyage" that doesn't quite know what it is supposed to be.... Read more
Published 19 months ago by KerrLines

5.0 out of 5 stars Movies for the French classroom
If you want your students to be spellbound, this is a great one!
Published on June 5, 2007 by Kaye

3.0 out of 5 stars C'est Bon...
I've only recently started watching foreign films regularly. And I can't say that I've enjoyed them all (or that my favorite foreign films could ever surpass my favorite American... Read more
Published on May 13, 2007 by TNTSafari

5.0 out of 5 stars Playful French Fantasy
Bon Voyage doesn't take itself seriously and occasionally trips gloriously over romantic moments that turn into comical charades to leave you laughing. Read more
Published on September 6, 2006 by Rebecca Johnson

3.0 out of 5 stars A Bad Wig and Even Worse Teeth
This film was all right. The trailer led me to believe it was a delightful, lighthearted comedy. Well, not much laughing going on. Not because it was a serious movie. Read more
Published on July 9, 2006 by Bucky Beaver

3.0 out of 5 stars so so
Everything is upside down in this movie. France is being attacked by Germany, but looks like noone bothers to fight back. Read more
Published on June 21, 2006 by Ruslan Moskalenko

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