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Un po' per caso, un po' per desiderio

Titolo originale: Fauteuils d'orchestre
  • 2006
  • PG-13
  • 1h 46min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
4557
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un po' per caso, un po' per desiderio (2006)
Guarda Bande-annonce [OV]
Riproduci trailer1: 45
7 video
20 foto
ComedyDramaRomance

Una giovane arriva a Parigi e trova lavoro come cameriera in un bar accanto ad Avenue Montaigne che serve i teatri circostanti e gli abitanti facoltosi della zona. Incontrerà il mondo lussuo... Leggi tuttoUna giovane arriva a Parigi e trova lavoro come cameriera in un bar accanto ad Avenue Montaigne che serve i teatri circostanti e gli abitanti facoltosi della zona. Incontrerà il mondo lussuoso di cui la nonna le aveva parlato da bambina.Una giovane arriva a Parigi e trova lavoro come cameriera in un bar accanto ad Avenue Montaigne che serve i teatri circostanti e gli abitanti facoltosi della zona. Incontrerà il mondo lussuoso di cui la nonna le aveva parlato da bambina.

  • Regia
    • Danièle Thompson
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Danièle Thompson
    • Christopher Thompson
  • Star
    • Cécile de France
    • Valérie Lemercier
    • Albert Dupontel
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,7/10
    4557
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Danièle Thompson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Danièle Thompson
      • Christopher Thompson
    • Star
      • Cécile de France
      • Valérie Lemercier
      • Albert Dupontel
    • 26Recensioni degli utenti
    • 74Recensioni della critica
    • 64Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria e 6 candidature totali

    Video7

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:45
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Avenue Montaigne
    Trailer 1:56
    Avenue Montaigne
    Avenue Montaigne
    Trailer 1:56
    Avenue Montaigne
    Avenue Montaigne
    Trailer 1:56
    Avenue Montaigne
    Avenue Montaigne
    Clip 1:08
    Avenue Montaigne
    Avenue Montaigne Scene: Rack Of Lamb
    Clip 1:27
    Avenue Montaigne Scene: Rack Of Lamb
    Avenue Montaigne Scene: There's Even A Shower
    Clip 1:45
    Avenue Montaigne Scene: There's Even A Shower

    Foto20

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    + 14
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali42

    Modifica
    Cécile de France
    Cécile de France
    • Jessica
    • (as Cécile De France)
    Valérie Lemercier
    Valérie Lemercier
    • Catherine Versen
    Albert Dupontel
    Albert Dupontel
    • Jean-François Lefort
    Claude Brasseur
    Claude Brasseur
    • Jacques Grumberg
    Christopher Thompson
    • Frédéric Grumberg
    Dani
    Dani
    • Claudie
    Laura Morante
    Laura Morante
    • Valentine Lefort
    Suzanne Flon
    Suzanne Flon
    • Madame Roux
    Sydney Pollack
    Sydney Pollack
    • Brian Sobinsky
    François Rollin
    • Marcel
    Guillaume Gallienne
    Guillaume Gallienne
    • Pascal
    Annelise Hesme
    Annelise Hesme
    • Valérie
    Françoise Lépine
    • Magali Garrel
    Michel Vuillermoz
    • Félix
    Daniel Benoin
    • Daniel Bercoff
    Christian Hecq
    Christian Hecq
    • Grégoire Bergonhe
    Simon de Pury
    Simon de Pury
    • Le commissaire priseur
    Julia Molkhou
    • Margot
    • Regia
      • Danièle Thompson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Danièle Thompson
      • Christopher Thompson
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti26

    6,74.5K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    9bob998

    I left smiling

    I left the theater smiling. I'd had a really good time in a film that celebrates human diversity and the possibilities for contact between people in a big city. I found the performances really good, particularly Albert Dupontel as the pianist, Sydney Pollack as the American director, Dani as the theater concierge and Claude Brasseur as the aging art collector. Daniele Thompson has made two other films (which I haven't seen) and she must be one of the more talented filmmakers in France today.

    The film abounds in wonderful set pieces which serve to reveal the character's qualities. When Catherine Versen meets Sobinski by chance in the restaurant, it's a deliciously comic encounter that shows her insecurity about playing in mediocre TV soaps. There she is, talking to the famous director, and she can't get the names of his films straight.
    7mstomaso

    Delightful Parisian Light Romance

    Daniele and Christopher Thomspon's light melodrama "Avenue Montaigne" (AKA Fauteuils d'orchestre) paints a wandering portrait of life in Paris' theatre district, centered on a small bistro which brings together stars, writers, directors, musicians, celebrity worshipers, and waiters. Several story arcs involving a variety of somewhat neurotic main characters are woven together around the story of the single character who does not appear to indulge in any particular neuroses - Jessica (Cecile DeFrance), a young woman who has come to Paris in hopes of creating an independent life for herself. Tirelessly hopeful, homeless, and delightful, Jessica's willfulness and charming personality wins her a job as the first female employee of the bistro around which most of the stories evolve.

    Here, our heroine meets a brilliant pianist who is sick of the constraints of his own success and is married to a beloved wife who has sacrificed her own career to support his (Lefort - Albert DuPontel); A father and son (the Grumbergs, played by Claude Brasseur and Christopher Thompson) whose strained relationship is complicated by the father's very successful habit of collecting great art; A very high-strung, experienced and intelligent aging actress, who is terrified that her greatest opportunities may lie behind her (Catherine - Valerie Lemercier), and others.

    Jessica's elderly and somewhat senile grandmother, who raised her, plays a pivotal, but largely behind-the-scenes role in all of this. In a sense Jessica comes to Paris to allow her grandmother to vicariously live on through Jessica just as much as she does so in order to find her own path.

    The stories implied above are very nicely juxtaposed and the overall structure of the film is reminiscent of other excellent French and Italian melodramas. Avenue Montaigne, as most mainstream melodramas do, pays off with resolution, but does not challenge believability (often a problem for modernistic melodrama) and is, like the complex characters it examines, not entirely predictable.

    Uplifting, but honest and realistic, the film is very well acted all-around, excellently scripted and nicely directed and edited. I found Ms DeFrance, Valerie Lemercier and Albert Dupontel particularly outstanding. The soundtrack is also quite nicely integrated into the action of the film, sometimes giving the film a sometimes-needed touch of magical fantasy.

    Highly recommended for the romance/melodrama crowd. Recommended for others.
    10underfrog-1

    Fauteuils D'orchestre

    My family and I love this movie Daniele Thomson and her son Christopher wrote a wonderful story and put it under the Paris sky and wonderful sites of the city, each person in this movie has a some thing that we can relate with, the comedy part is fowlowed by heart felt sentiments. The acting is superb ,the Effel Tower with the flashing lights is so romantic,the young girl is so believable and will probably be a great star.I had the priveledge to stay at the hotel across the theater and was so glad to see it in that movie ,I also went to the restaurant next door and talked to the real waiter Marcel, this movie has no violence and can be seen by the all family. I felt like I was back in Paris ,I will get the DVD and watch it every time I am lonesome for that wonderful city, it was a delight Chistopher Thompson also a good actor and writer.
    9Galina_movie_fan

    Merci beaucoup, Madame Thompson

    Avenue Montaigne aka Fauteuils d'orchestre or Orchestra Seats is the second movie directed by Daniéle Thompson and written by her and her son Christopher Thompson that I have seen. I like her work very much and look forward to see her Jet Lag (2002), another romantic comedy or rather light drama with Juliette Binoche and Jean Réno.

    Few months ago I saw my first Thompson's movie, La Bûche (1999), the stories of three sisters, the Parisians with the sweet Russian names, Sonya (Emmanuelle Béart), Lyuba (Sabine Azémaand), and Milla (Charlotte Gainsbourg), and their parents who have been divorced for 25 years but still have a lot to say to each other. I was charmed by the clever, funny, touching and poignant Christmas dramedy in Paris. I expected to like "Avenue Montaigne" as much as La Bûche and I was not disappointed. The story of a young provincial girl Jessica, a waitress at the legendary café which has been frequented by the rich, famous, and talented for many years is linked with the stories of an actress, a piano player and an art collector. All three are successful, wealthy, talented, and...unhappy. Jacques, an art collector is determined to sell the priceless pieces he and his late wife had collected for 30 years. Jean-François (Albert Dupontel), internationally renowned concert pianist is suffocating in the life where every day is scheduled for many years ahead by his wife, who is also his manager. He adores music and he is madly in love with his wife whom he may lose if he quits his career. Valerie Lemercier as Catherine steels the film as the hugely popular and wealthy TV star who dreams of playing in the Art movies. Her scene with the American film director, Sobinski (Sidney Pollack) who came to Paris looking for an actress in his biopic about Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre elevates the nice stylish comedy to the higher level. Lemercie was incredibly passionate, riveting, and yes, sexy when she gave Sobinski her vision of the celebrated author, philosopher, feminist, who was a muse and inspiration, friend and lover to some of the most brilliant men from the last century. I would run, not just walk to see the movie about Simone de Beauvoir with Lemercie as Simone.

    Set in always captivating Paris, filled with the thoroughly chosen soundtrack that features Beethoven's Finale de la sonate 'La Tempête' ( my favorite Beethoven's sonata), "Consolation N°3 en ré bémol majeur" composed by Franz Liszt, and the songs of such French singing legends as Gilbert Bécaud, Juliette Gréco, and Charles Aznavour, the latest Danièle Thompson's film is a charm and delight. Daughter of director Gérard Oury has inherited her father's talent and I will be waiting for her every new movie.
    8Chris Knipp

    This is very glossy mainstream French stuff; could do well with the older US art-house crowd

    ORCHESTRA SEATS/FAUTEUILS D'ORCHESTRE:

    Danièle Thompson's third directorial outing (preceded by La Bûche and Jet Lag/Décolage horaire) flows brilliantly on a grand scale doling out clichés and pungent acting in equal measure. It could do quite well with the older generation US art house audience and if the Film Society was looking for French films unlikely to be distributed here, this and the opener Palais Royal! were odd choices. Series viewers begin with a big dose of Valérie Lemercier, since she is prominent in both this and Palais Royal!

    Three high-profile lives will meet deadlines on Paris' chic Avenue Montaigne on the 17th of the month in this story – a famous pianist is going to perform Beethoven, a popular TV actress debuts in a Feydeau farce, and a millionaire is going to auction off the great collection of modern art he's spent a lifetime assembling.

    All three are dissatisfied. TV star Catherine Versen (Valérie Lemercier) gets extravagant paychecks for playing a problem-solving mayor on a popular high toned soap and runs into passionate fans wherever she goes, but she'd really much rather be a serious actress and play, say, Simone de Beauvoir in the movie a famous American director, Brian Sobinski (Sydney Pollack) is in town to cast. Millionaire businessman Jacques Grunberg (Claude Brasseur) is still enjoying life, but he knows not much of it remains to him. He is ill, and his relations with his grumpy professor son Frédéric (Christopher Thomson, the director's son) are cold. His collection is no longer alive to him either. He makes up for it with a young trophy girlfriend. Pianist Jean-Francois Lefort (Albert Dupontel) is managed by his mournful but devoted wife Valentine (Laura Morante, the mother in Moretti's The Son's Room) and he's booked solid for the next six years, but the whole concert life feels as constrictive to him as the evening clothes he must wear for concerts (Dupontel looks like a hunkier version of the sad pianist played by Charles Aznavour in Truffaut's Shoot the Piano Player). Jean-Francois wants to dump it all, but his wife, whom he loves, may bolt if he does.

    Tying all these celebs together are a couple of charming observers, Jessica and Claudie. Claudie (Dani) is the theater concierge and she's about to retire. Claudie has lived her dream of meeting all the pop stars as well as classical performers of decades past. She had no talent, she announces, so she chose to be around talent, and she succeeded and feels her life was very worthwhile. The moments when we see her lip-sync old French pop songs whose singers she's known through her job are perhaps the film's happiest. As a kind of Ariel and mascot for the piece there is Jessica (Cécile de France), a naive cutie from the provinces with a pretty face and charming smile (the Belgian-born Cécile has been one of French film's most promising young female stars of recent years) who's just landed a wait job at the old-fashioned Café des Arts – a place that serves every level of society that works in the quarter – and who, wouldn't you know it, quickly meets Jacques, Jean-Francois, Catherine, and even Frérdéric, who's eventually smitten, and Jessica hears them all unload their problems.

    Book-ending the piece is the relationship of Jessica and the grandma who raised her (Suzanne Flon), Madame Roux, whose life foreshadowed Jessica's: she "always loved luxury" but was poor so when she went to Paris she worked as a maid in the ladies room of the Ritz. Flon just died at 87 and the film is dedicated to her: one of those great French cinematic troupers, she was performing, delightfully, in films right up until the end -- eight films in the past five years.

    There's climax, romance, and reconciliation in store at the end for the cast. This is very glossy mainstream French stuff, good writing by Christopher Thompson in collaboration with his mother Danièle, smooth directing, good work by the stellar cast. Lemercider isn't as buffoonish as she was in Palais Royal!—one begins to see her appeal. The movie doesn't take itself too seriously even if the scenes between the pianist and his Italian wife are a bit intense, due to casting. The question is, what's this all about, and why must we concern ourselves with the "predicaments" of people who from the looks of it are so singularly fortunate in life?

    (Shwon as part of the Rendez-Vous with French Cinema series at Lincoln Center, March 2006, Fauteuils d'orchestre opened in Paris February 15, 2006.)

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Final film of Suzanne Flon.
    • Blooper
      When Dupontel (Jean-François Lefort) gives his concert and takes off his shirt and jacket they change places, first in front of the long end of the piano then in the next cut much closer to the keyboard end.
    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Before end credits: "À Suzanne" (dedicated to Suzanne Flon who died at 87 shortly after filming was completed), as we hear an off-screen quote by her - taken from earlier in the film - where the elderly character she plays serenely states that she had a good life.
    • Connessioni
      References Taxi Driver (1976)
    • Colonne sonore
      Je Reviens te Chercher
      Music by Gilbert Bécaud

      Lyrics by Pierre Delanoë

      Performed by Gilbert Bécaud

    I più visti

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    • How long is Orchestra Seats?Powered by Alexa

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 9 giugno 2006 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Francia
    • Lingue
      • Francese
      • Inglese
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Orchestra Seats
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • 15 - Théâtre des Champs Elysées, Avenue Montaigne, Paris 8, Parigi, Francia
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Thelma Films
      • StudioCanal
      • TF1 Films Production
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 8.000.000 € (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 2.044.858 USD
    • Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 29.377 USD
      • 18 feb 2007
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 17.690.533 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 46 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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