Details

Movie Description From Olivier Assayas, the director of IRMA VEP and L'EAU FROIDE, comes LES DESTINÉES, a tender and sophisticated period piece starring Emmanuelle Béart and Charles Berling. Based on the novel by Jacques Chardonne, this epic film takes place in France from 1900 to the '30s. Focusing on the life of Jean Barnery (Berling), the film is divided into three 60-minute chapters. The first chapter is dedicated to Jean's first wife Nathalie (an icy Isabelle Huppert) and the scandal that causes him to abandon his career as a pastor in the insular village of Barbizac. The next chapter centers on his second wife and true love, Pauline (Béart), for whom he gives up his family fortune so that they may live a simple romantic life in a chalet nestled in the Swiss Alps. The third chapter, which explores with philosophical curiosity the effects of war and economy on community and industry, focuses firmly on Jean's primary love, porcelain. With beautiful period costumes, touching dialogue, and a convincing display of the passage of time, LES DESTINÉES features some unforgettable sequences. At a Barbizac ball, the camera lingers in the chandelier as dancers swirl in a dizzying waltz below. In the Swiss Alps, Jean paddles an exquisite wooden rowboat as Pauline swims in azure water. Later, the film depicts the Limoges porcelain factory in detail with its mammoth coal-fueled kilns offset by skilled artisans carefully painting the fresh china. In addition, the Barbizac brandy business, managed by Pauline's uncle (Olivier Perrier), gets a good amount of play, with the amber liquor being ladled out for tasting during its lengthy aging process.
This film was included in the Rendez-Vous with French Cinema 2002 festival organized by the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City.
Film Notes DVD Features:
Region 0 Keep Case Letterboxed Interactive Features: Scene Access Interactive Menus
US Theatrical Release: April 5, 2002 (NY)
French Theatrical Release: June 26, 2000.
Original Production Year: 2000.
Industry Reviews "...Assayas has long cultivated a sense of lightness in his filmmaking, which he applies here to intriguing effect..." Film Comment - Kristin M. Jones (03/01/2002)
"...LES DESTINEES has a swift, intimate feel....LES DESTINEES displays a commitment to the fine grain of its story that is nothing less than thrilling..." New York Times - A. O. Scott (04/12/2002)
"...Sweeping yet intimate, profoundly moving....It brings to mind GONE WITH THE WIND in its depth and scope and in its love story, which unfolds over a turbulent era..." Los Angeles Times - Kevin Thomas (05/17/2002)
"...A long, attentive epic about the span of a life and the seasons of a love....A remarkable saga..." Chicago Sun-Times - Roger Ebert (07/28/2002)
"...Assayas has a sumptuous way with a set-piece....Charles Berling and Isabelle Huppert both turn in creditable performances..." Sight and Sound - Danny Leigh (07/01/2001)
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