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La Vie En Rose

Título original: La Môme
  • 2007
  • B
  • 2h 20min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.5/10
93 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
La Vie En Rose (2007)
Theatrical Trailer from Picturehouse Entertainment
Reproducir trailer2:02
4 videos
99+ fotos
BiografíaDocudramaDramaDrama de ÉpocaMúsicaRomance

Biografía de la icónica cantante francesa Édith Piaf. Criada por su abuela en un burdel, fue descubierta mientras cantaba en una esquina a la edad de 19 años. A pesar de su éxito, la vida de... Leer todoBiografía de la icónica cantante francesa Édith Piaf. Criada por su abuela en un burdel, fue descubierta mientras cantaba en una esquina a la edad de 19 años. A pesar de su éxito, la vida de Piaf estuvo llena de tragedia.Biografía de la icónica cantante francesa Édith Piaf. Criada por su abuela en un burdel, fue descubierta mientras cantaba en una esquina a la edad de 19 años. A pesar de su éxito, la vida de Piaf estuvo llena de tragedia.

  • Dirección
    • Olivier Dahan
  • Guionistas
    • Isabelle Sobelman
    • Olivier Dahan
  • Elenco
    • Marion Cotillard
    • Sylvie Testud
    • Pascal Greggory
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.5/10
    93 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Olivier Dahan
    • Guionistas
      • Isabelle Sobelman
      • Olivier Dahan
    • Elenco
      • Marion Cotillard
      • Sylvie Testud
      • Pascal Greggory
    • 286Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 189Opiniones de los críticos
    • 66Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 2 premios Óscar
      • 48 premios ganados y 61 nominaciones en total

    Videos4

    La Vie En Rose
    Trailer 2:02
    La Vie En Rose
    La Vie En Rose Scene: Edith At Gerny
    Clip 2:53
    La Vie En Rose Scene: Edith At Gerny
    La Vie En Rose Scene: Edith At Gerny
    Clip 2:53
    La Vie En Rose Scene: Edith At Gerny
    La Vie En Rose Scene: Edith Sings The Anthem
    Clip 1:41
    La Vie En Rose Scene: Edith Sings The Anthem
    La Vie En Rose Scene: La Vie En Rose
    Clip 1:11
    La Vie En Rose Scene: La Vie En Rose

    Fotos147

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    Elenco principal99+

    Editar
    Marion Cotillard
    Marion Cotillard
    • Edith Piaf
    Sylvie Testud
    Sylvie Testud
    • Mômone
    Pascal Greggory
    Pascal Greggory
    • Louis Barrier
    Emmanuelle Seigner
    Emmanuelle Seigner
    • Titine
    Jean-Paul Rouve
    Jean-Paul Rouve
    • Louis Gassion
    Gérard Depardieu
    Gérard Depardieu
    • Louis Leplée
    Clotilde Courau
    Clotilde Courau
    • Anetta
    Jean-Pierre Martins
    Jean-Pierre Martins
    • Marcel Cerdan
    Catherine Allégret
    Catherine Allégret
    • Louise
    Marc Barbé
    Marc Barbé
    • Raymond Asso
    Caroline Silhol
    Caroline Silhol
    • Marlene Dietrich
    Manon Chevallier
    • Edith - 5 years old
    Pauline Burlet
    Pauline Burlet
    • Edith - 10 years old
    Élisabeth Commelin
    • Danielle Bonel
    • (as Elisabeth Commelin)
    Marc Gannot
    • Marc Bonel
    Caroline Raynaud
    • Ginou
    Marie-Armelle Deguy
    • Marguerite Monnot
    Valérie Moreau
    • Jeanne
    • Dirección
      • Olivier Dahan
    • Guionistas
      • Isabelle Sobelman
      • Olivier Dahan
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios286

    7.592.7K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    10herrbigbadwolf

    This movie...it's a poem about a poet...

    ...a song about a singer.

    I adore it. Nothing else is there to be said, really. The acting, all round, is sensational, but the lead, Marion Cotillard's portrayal of Edith Piaf, is beyond words. More astonishing even, I'd dare to say, than what Bruno Ganz did with Adolf Hitler in Der Untergang (although Ganz had only a mass murderer and historical criminal to work with, while Cotillard was dealing with, pardon me for saying, the soul of an entire nation).

    I would like to comment on the script. The little symbolic moments, full of grief, full of such a profound sadness...I have never seen this done so well. Certain elements of the story, a conversation or object, are only within the lasting of the film transformed from everyday, mundane stuff into everlasting symbols of affection, of redemption and personal torment.

    You see, this is the strong point of the film - it tries to(and often it manages) make you cry because of her tough life, but at the end you are crying because of the good things that happened to her. They too, are over: Edith never even regrets the bad ones.

    The music is a whole story on its own. I've loved Piaf for some years now, but, alas, I don't speak French, and now, at last, I have some context to place the songs into...and it breaks me. It really does.

    I saw the movie yesterday, went home, and listened to Edith's albums for hours, and they meant so much...they spoke volumes.

    Anyway, the direction is perfect, although there is one scene towards the end which has problems - it tells, for the very first time, of a rather important event in the much earlier years of the singer's life , and the event in question seems to be out of place, sort of neglected - as if it should have been dealt with an hour earlier. But this is only one tiny scene, and even it, in itself, is masterfully done. Everything else is flawless.

    The cuts and the singing are blended brilliantly together. I was especially struck, which is strange, by the end credits: they are very unusual and touching for a movie which is this musical (find out why!).

    Anyway, my deepest recommendations. See it, it is really excellent. It is dark and human and bright, and full of spectacular music.

    It is the 20th century.

    I fell in love with it.

    You might too.
    9paul-3239

    A French afternoon in New York

    Before getting to the review of this astonishing film, let me tell you about how I came to see it. On my way back to the UK from Indiana last week I had a seven hour layover in Newark. I don't much enjoy hanging around airports for hours, so I took the 30 minute train ride into Manhattan. Wandering up the road from Maddison Square Gardens I heard a smart-suited African speaking French into his 'cellulaire'. Wondering if he was from Côte d'Ivoire where we used to live, I followed him through a shop doorway. As my eyes adjusted to the rather greasy gloom, I noted that I had entered a little Caribbean bakery/restaurant full of black faces. I suppressed the desire to make a quick exit and joined him at the back of the queue at the counter. He turned out to be Senegalese rather than Ivorian, but was very pleased to have another chance to talk French...

    After a very tasty $7 lunch of 'stew chicken with rice & beans' and a portion of fried plantains, I headed on up 8th Avenue. A few blocks further on I came to a cinema and decided that it would be great to see a 'movie' on a real big screen rather than the way I see most films these days through the distinctly low-def screen built into the back of the airline seat in front of me.

    I was just in time to buy tickets for La Vie en Rose which was starting right away. Entering the big 'movie theater' I was shocked that at four on a Wednesday afternoon the place was packed solid. As my eyes adjusted and hunted for an empty seat I observed that I was once again the stranger - almost everyone there appeared to be over sixty. Perhaps it was the cheap day for seniors or the fact that La Vie en Rose had only opened a few days earlier but the film definitely merits a large audience.

    Perhaps you are put off by foreign language films with subtitles, but to have dubbed this from French would have been a crime. It is a biopic of the life of Edith Piaf whose theme song was La Vie en Rose - literally 'Life in Pink' or more idiomatically 'The Rose-tinted Life'. Edith Piaf's gravelly voice and melodramatic life is superbly portrayed by Marion Cotillard as the film works its way through her life to the accompaniment of her distinctive songs. Of course, as in all French films which make it to the anglophone world, there is a role for THE French Actor as we often refer to Gerard Depardieu; he is the impresario who literally discovers 'the Little Sparrow' singing in the back-streets of Montmartre.

    It was quite a puzzle to place each scene in chronological order as the film jumps around through more flashbacks and flash forwards than an entire season of Lost. Apart from that though, La Vie en Rose is an absolute triumph, rich with the colours of Piaf's tragic life. The entire audience stuffed damp handkerchiefs into their pockets, rose to their feet and applauded this guaranteed Oscar winner. Piaf finished her career singing a song which she felt summed up her life - "Non je ne regrette rien!" Take your friends to see this classic film and you'll have no regrets either.
    9brendastern

    La Vie En Rose, Thorns and All

    I saw this film at the French Film Festival in New York in April, and the memory of it still leaves me shattered. It is a brutally candid portrayal of Edith Piaf, who was known as La Mome, or the Little Sparrow. She had a violent, drug-filled and tragic private life, making Billie Holiday look like a Catholic school girl by comparison. (She was proud of being the same age as Holiday, and often referred to her in conversation.) Marian Cotillard is simply amazing in the role. She captures Piaf's looks perfectly, and her brushes with illness as well as her fame are vividly portrayed. Gerard Depardieu makes only a brief appearance, but the rest of the cast does a fine job. The more I have thought about this film, the more it reminds me of 8 1/2, and wonder if others will see the similarities. The only thing that keeps me from giving it a 10 is that by the end, the audience is completely wrung out, and there seems to be a one-note aspect to it. Perhaps a bit of editing would have done the trick. In any case, this is head and shoulders above most summer fare and any film or cabaret music buff will enjoy it.
    9Flagrant-Baronessa

    I'm coming to the conclusion that this is the best biopic I have ever seen

    It is difficult to overstate the necessary calibre of a woman who was raised in a filthy whorehouse, sung and slept on the street, travelled with the circus, lost her child at 20, went blind for a time, was wrongly accused of murder, struggled with a drug addiction and lost other loved ones by the bucketload in her life, and still got up on stage at the end of her life to sing "Je ne regrette rien". La Môme documents each stage of Edith Piaf's life with creative direction and an intense performance by its lead actress, Martion Cotillard.

    Ultimately it is a film that curiously enough does not come down to acting or story so much as it owes everything to its direction by Olivier Dahan. Audiences have been divided thus far on his efforts as they are somewhat unorthodox, but I believe he has truly done something magical with what could have fallen prey to a by-the-numbers biopic approach. In La Môme, the continuity is clipped and fragmentary at several points in the film, with scene 2 melting into scene 1 as opposed to vice versa. The story of Edith seems to fledge itself around two or three story lines simultaneously – her youth, her adulthood and her last days.

    Marion Cotillard, a personal favourite of mine, is perfect at each of the aforementioned stages, having met the wonders of realistic make-up but also clearly having connected with the character of Edith Piaf. As a young singer she is fumbling and bird-like, but always with raw intensity behind her performance. As an old lady (although from what I understand she was never truly that old at the time of her death) she has transformed into something else – a kind of loud, hysterical diva who is alternatively self-depreciative and overbearing, her youthful humility having been quenched by years of alcohol abuse and her bird-like body and gait having been crippled by rheumatism. Only once does Cotillard vaguely emerge from her character, and it is toward the end when Edith is sitting on a beach in California giving an interview. The rest of the film she is wholly chameleon-like and indistinguishable from la môme.

    Certainly this type of tragicomic drama with all of its poverty-stricken episodes and heart-rending tragedies is primed to elicit an emotional response, but Dahan goes the extra mile in polishing the story for audiences. It truly is a beautiful work of art, coated with sweeping tracking shots á la Paul Thomas Anderson or Martin Scorsese blended with shakycam to capture the fast, fickle pace of the business, endlessly creative intercutting of continuity and breathtaking scenes after another. When Piaf's beautiful hands have been noted, a muted performance is given in which the camera only focuses on her theatrics and hand gestures. Yet the best scene takes place in Piaf's apartment some 2/3s into the film in which she is waiting for her lover Marcel to fly in from Morocco. I shall give no spoilers. The film is momentarily gray and depressing, only to jerk the audience away from the misery and lose itself in a blossom-strewn pictorial style whenever Piaf goes on stage.

    La Môme is a one-woman-show in all respects, with Cotillard shamelessly relegating every other cast member to the background with her emotional intensity. But in all fairness supporting characters are not given much screen time in the film, seemingly floating away from the central story eventually, or dying in some tragedy, illustrating the lonely life of its titular singer. La Môme needs to be seen to be believed, for it unexpectedly floors all other musical biopics of recent years – or indeed ever.

    9 out of 10
    10mxtotten

    Not Just Your Adverage Bio Pic!

    I disagree with the previous comment regarding Olivier Dahan's direction, which was handle in my humble opinion, with such an eye for detail and created a wonderful, caring homage to Edith Piaf. I do believe that the chemistry between Mr. Dahan and the heart rendering performance by Marion Cotillard is what made the story riveting and visually stunning. Piaf's scattered "memories" are just what the film examines as she starts to dissect and remember fragmented moments in her life, and sometimes "in life" characters, relationships, lost loved ones are suddenly shifted and gone from one's perspective without any notice. The use of "just" the right amount of music, was done superbly as to not just make this a "concert type" musical biography but an exciting joy ride through an era long since past. By the time the credits were rolling both of my shirtsleeves were damp with tears of sorrow and tears of joy in discovering much more about such a remarkable, true modern day diva. I highly recommend this film.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      Marion Cotillard is one of only six actors to have won an Academy Award for a role spoken mainly in a non-English language. Sophia Loren, Robert De Niro, Benicio Del Toro, Roberto Benigni and Christoph Waltz are the other five.
    • Errores
      Just before a young soldier plays a song for Edith in her apartment, a supertitle reads "February 1940." An issue of "Paris Match," first published in 1949, is on the coffee table.
    • Citas

      American journalist: If you were to give advice to a woman, what would it be?

      Edith Piaf: Love.

      American journalist: To a young girl?

      Edith Piaf: Love.

      American journalist: To a child?

      Edith Piaf: Love.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Smagsdommerne: Episode #5.11 (2007)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Heaven Have a Mercy
      Music by Philippe-Gérard

      Lyrics by Jacques Larue

      Performed by Édith Piaf

    Selecciones populares

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    Preguntas Frecuentes33

    • How long is La Vie En Rose?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is 'La Vie en Rose' based on a book?
    • How is "la vie en rose" translated?
    • Why is "La Vie en Rose" listed as "La môme" in the IMDb?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 22 de febrero de 2008 (México)
    • Países de origen
      • Francia
      • Reino Unido
      • República Checa
    • Idiomas
      • Francés
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Çəhrayı rəngdə həyat
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Praga, República Checa(scenes supposed to take place in Paris in the 1950s)
    • Productoras
      • Légende Films
      • TF1 International
      • TF1 Films Production
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 25,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 10,301,706
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 179,848
      • 10 jun 2007
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 87,485,236
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 2h 20min(140 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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