Je t'aime, je t'aime
- 1968
- Tous publics
- 1h 34min
Après une tentative de suicide, Claude participe à une expérience de voyage dans le temps, mais lorsque la machine se détraque, il risque d'être coincé dans le déferlement aléatoire de ses s... Tout lireAprès une tentative de suicide, Claude participe à une expérience de voyage dans le temps, mais lorsque la machine se détraque, il risque d'être coincé dans le déferlement aléatoire de ses souvenirs.Après une tentative de suicide, Claude participe à une expérience de voyage dans le temps, mais lorsque la machine se détraque, il risque d'être coincé dans le déferlement aléatoire de ses souvenirs.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires au total
- Un inspecteur de police à Glasgow
- (as Allan Adair)
Avis à la une
The plot owes a huge debt to Chris Marker's far superior La Jetee, in which time-travel, love, and self-knowledge form a closed loop. Je T'Aime, despite its fractured chronology, is in fact more akin to a conventional tragic love story.
Director Renais was born in 1922, making him 46 in 1968 at the time this film was made. I think this is visible: Renais was perhaps too old to really feel and understand the 60s and its anarchic energy. While the film's time machine looks borrowed from "Barbarella", and the time-fracturing sometimes has a psychedelic quality, Renais' world-view is that of a man of the 1950s. (The hero is a WW2 veteran, firmly locating him in an earlier era.) The film is about existential dread, the weight of history, damaged and intractable male subjectivity. Meanwhile in Paris, in May '68, young people were rising up and discovering new forms of life.
The major flaws of the film are Claude Rich's unsympathetic performance as the protagonist, and a script that somehow leaves the love relationship feeling flat.
An interesting thought experiment: if the lead actor had been someone more appealing -- say, Alain Delon, instead of the somewhat weedy and overwrought Claude Rich -- would Je T'Aime be now regarded as a masterpiece? Quite possibly, yes.
For fans of Renais, worth seeking out. Otherwise, treat viewing Je T'aime as an experiment...from which you may or may not return.
After establishing a few science rules, the protagonist is plopped into a brain-shaped tent so he can travel back in time and relive a single minute from a year ago. But once in the past he finds himself jumping from memory to memory. Some memories are a few seconds, some might last a minute. Some connect, some seem to be random.
Many of the moments center around a depressed woman, and the movie is an exploration of her, and him, and whatever surrounds that. There are also moments that are just odd, like an unexplained guy in a Halloween mask.
Unfortunately, none of this is all that interesting. The lead character is a lump and his women seem interchangeable. (For me that is literally the case; I have faceblindness and could not figure out which woman was in which scene, which means this movie was harder for me to follow than it would be for someone who didn't have issues recognizing faces).
The look is as bland as the characters, and the whole thing feels more like an intellectual exercise than a genuine attempt to say something about anything.
Resnais captures the seemingly mundane rituals of everyday life-dead time- that define the essence of human existence. Ridder's unremarkable life is presented in terse and abstract episodes that, although also eschewing narrative, inherently illustrate a complexity of form, experience, tactility, and emotional realism. In the end, it is the film's organic ability to convey depth and texturality that elicits pathos and humanity for the deeply flawed, alienated, modern day tragic hero imprisoned by the eternal torment of his inescapable, haunted memories.This is a remarkable film-a link between Marker's La Jetée and Gondry's The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind-which doesn't quite come off, as you can't quite pin-point the moment the lover's drifted apart. A cubist structure is built up from a man's life cut in pieces. It's compelling technically, not emotionally: Claude is a neurotic daydreamer, and can't effect any changes, washed on the tides of fractured memory like a jellyfish.Like the haunting image of the mouse at the end the self is trapped in a glass cage, gasping for air. An astringent artistry is at play behind it all.
Le saviez-vous
- Citations
Claude Ridder: Catherine. Catherine... I love you. Do you hear me? I love you. It was the only reason. Long before you die. And now I'm dead. I'm cold. I hear my words. It's the drug... How likely I'll survive? Oh yeah, 100% if I were a rat. Then I'm a rat, because I'm alive. Now see... anyway still have to wait four minutes. And the rat? Where is the rat?
- ConnexionsFeatured in Paradis: Je m'ennuie (2012)
- Bandes originalesMisterioso
by Thelonious Monk
Meilleurs choix
- How long is I Love You, I Love You?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- I Love You, I Love You
- Lieux de tournage
- Avenue Jules Malou, Etterbeek, Brussels, Brussels-Capital, Belgique(Ridder getting out of the hospital)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 71 717 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 12 869 $US
- 16 févr. 2014
- Montant brut mondial
- 80 393 $US