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IMDbPro

O Tempo que Resta

Título original: Le temps qui reste
  • 2005
  • Unrated
  • 1 h 21 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
9,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
O Tempo que Resta (2005)
Theatrical Trailer from Strand Releasing
Reproduzir trailer1:47
1 vídeo
26 fotos
Drama

Um fotógrafo de moda com câncer terminal decide morrer sozinho e prepara as pessoas para viver além dele em vez de prolongar o inevitável com quimioterapia ou ser sufocado pela simpatia daqu... Ler tudoUm fotógrafo de moda com câncer terminal decide morrer sozinho e prepara as pessoas para viver além dele em vez de prolongar o inevitável com quimioterapia ou ser sufocado pela simpatia daqueles que o conhecem.Um fotógrafo de moda com câncer terminal decide morrer sozinho e prepara as pessoas para viver além dele em vez de prolongar o inevitável com quimioterapia ou ser sufocado pela simpatia daqueles que o conhecem.

  • Direção
    • François Ozon
  • Roteirista
    • François Ozon
  • Artistas
    • Melvil Poupaud
    • Jeanne Moreau
    • Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,1/10
    9,5 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • François Ozon
    • Roteirista
      • François Ozon
    • Artistas
      • Melvil Poupaud
      • Jeanne Moreau
      • Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    • 52Avaliações de usuários
    • 81Avaliações da crítica
    • 67Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 vitórias e 2 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Time to Leave
    Trailer 1:47
    Time to Leave

    Fotos26

    Ver pôster
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    Elenco principal30

    Editar
    Melvil Poupaud
    Melvil Poupaud
    • Romain
    Jeanne Moreau
    Jeanne Moreau
    • Laura
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    • Jany
    • (as Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi)
    Daniel Duval
    Daniel Duval
    • Le père
    Marie Rivière
    Marie Rivière
    • La mère
    Christian Sengewald
    • Sasha
    Louise-Anne Hippeau
    • Sophie
    Henri de Lorme
    • Le médecin
    Walter Pagano
    • Bruno
    Violetta Sanchez
    • L'agent
    Ugo Soussan Trabelsi
    • Romain enfant
    Alba Gaïa Bellugi
    Alba Gaïa Bellugi
    • Sophie enfant
    • (as Alba Gaïa Kradhege Bellugi)
    Victor Poulouin
    • Laurent
    Laurence Ragon
    • La notaire
    Thomas Gizolme
    • L'assistant photographe
    Estelle Dupuis
    • La styliste
    Hisano Komine
    • La maquilleuse
    Stéphane Forlay
    • Le coiffeur
    • Direção
      • François Ozon
    • Roteirista
      • François Ozon
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários52

    7,19.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    jovadewo

    Le Temps Qui Reste

    This film's main theme is such a cliché and so simple: What would you do if you are told that you only have 2-3 months to live? How would you deal with things? Would you fight, and do everything in your power to, perhaps, experience that curing miracle, or would you accept things, as a matter of course... and wait for death to come. This film really makes you think. The main character, marvelously performed by Melvil Poupaud, is not really a sympathetic man, is he? Or is he? Aren't you master of your own life, especially when you have a short time left... He obviously wishes to solve some "personal problems" (relations with people around him which he doesn't find as they should be) in an accelerated, black and white way. To create something clear and defined before dieing... Obviously his life had been a mess. But relations are also about giving and taking, and about accepting imperfect things in relationships. Throughout the movie you get more sympathy with Romain. The telephone call with his sister (whom he had told some unkind things just before) is moving. 'It isn't about you, it's about me". Didn't Fassbinder tell us "Each man kills the thing he loves"... Do you want to protect others by not saying you are going to die... This is altruism in an egoistic way, isn't it? The film is a melodrama, but in my case it made me think... And that's the purpose of a good film, isn't it? All the characters are well typecast and performed. At times the film is even moving, but a tearjerker it never becomes... It's not a new "Love Story". Romain's "Pardon", a sorry softly spoken, with nobody around and never addressed to the person it was meant to, was a moving moment in the film. Also the fact that Romain being gay (and his gay life style) is no theme for the plot in the film, is absolutely refreshing. Homosexuality should just be one of the many facts of life (in the lives of many). (Joris, Amsterdam)
    8imdb-jeroen

    A tender movie about life, a feel-good movie about someone dying.

    The first thing that strikes me as very unusual about this movie is that the main character is gay, and that that is not the subject of the movie, not even an issue. I don't know of any other movie like that.

    Having said this, let's leave the subject of homosexuality, just like the film does, and not scare heterosexuals away. Of course the subject of the movie, saying goodbye to life, isn't new, neither original. But sometimes it isn't the story itself, but the way it is told that makes it worthwhile. To my opinion Ozon is a very good storyteller. I think tenderness, and the love for people and for life itself must have inspired him a lot.

    Some scene's could be seen as provocative and politically incorrect, but the way they are woven into the story makes them credible and the way they are filmed makes them just beautiful. Ozon has a way of filming sex scene's as what they are; a nice part of everyday life.

    The movie left me moved, but not sad.
    8dbdumonteil

    the grandson of "Cléo De 5 à 7" (1961)

    "time slips away and the light constantly fades..." (the Cure, Seventeen Seconds from the eponymous album, 1980).

    Here comes François Ozon once again with a long-anticipated vehicle and a prickly topic which has been used countless of times in cinema with varying results: a person who has an incurable disease and who's going to die soon. She's got only a few months, even weeks to live. How does she react? How does she live her last moments of life? This is the thrust of Ozon's latest opus "Le Temps Qui Reste" (2005) and it is a remarkable movie in which Ozon eschews what could have caused the fiasco of the film: pathos. There's no whiff of it in Romain's slow way towards death. According to his author, it is the second opus of a trilogy begun with "Sous Le Sable" (2000) and which will close with a third film about the death of a child. It's true that "Le Temps Qui Reste" has a few common points with "Sous Le Sable": both end with a sequence in which the main protagonist is standing on a beach but the difference between the two films lies in the fact that in "Sous Le Sable", the viewer and Charlotte Rampling weren't fully sure about Bruno Cremer's death. Maybe did he abscond, maybe did he leave Rampling whereas here we are absolutely sure about the terrible truth: Romain is going to die in spite of the words pronounced by the doctor aiming at bringing an inkling of hope. Besides, the sequence at the hospital is credible. A doctor has to tell his patient that there is a glimmer of hope although he pertinently knows the tragic exit. The sequence which comes after where we can see Romain sitting on a bench, looking around him also rings true.

    So, Romain is a young photograph in his early thirties. He's homosexual and lives with his lover in a quite comfortable flat. His life shows all the signs of professional and sentimental success. But one day, everything falls apart when one day he learns that he has a generalized cancer. Where Ozon retains the attention is how he shoots the evolution of his main character. The author of the fabulous "8 Femmes" (2002) has once said that he didn't care about the New Wave (although he puts Eric Rohmer and Claude Chabrol in his straitjacket of favorite filmmakers). Well, I don't care for it either apart from notable exceptions. Among these exceptions, there's "Cléo De 5 à 7" (1961) by Agnès Varda, probably one of the most accessible movies of this movement in spite of the gravity of the topic. The topic is the same as "Le Temps Qui Reste" and the psychological evolution of Cléo is more or less the same as Romain's. Ingoing at the beginning of their tragedy, mature at the end as death comes closer. In Romain's case, Ozon presents him as an obnoxious, brazen and egocentric young man who only lives for his job. Then he has an argument with his family an evening (the sequence of the dinner is quite incommoding) and then with his lover. He decides to visit his grandmother (Jeanne Moreau) and his stay at her house constitutes the crux of the film. He finds himself with a person who lives the same situation as him. He tells to her: "because me and you we are close to death". In Varda's piece of work, it was a young soldier Antoine who helped Cléo to accept her disease and so made her fearless facing death because he saw death very close to him too (the context was in 1961 during the Algerian war, a "dirty war", the equivalent of Vietnam for the USA). In Ozon's flick, Romain's stay at her grandmother's altered him: he tries to reconcile himself with his family, his lover and is even ready to make a baby to a family (the young woman is played by Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi who held the main role in Ozon's precedent film, "5x2", 2004). After that, Romain seems to have become another man, he has accepted to belong to the world that surrounds him and appears to be at ease and relieved amid it (see the last almost timeless sequences when he's by the sea). So, if the first part of the film was disturbing, the second one has a placating whiff. Romain's visit to his grandmother is the central and crucial moment between the two. Ozon's camera knows how to capture the situation, the feeling, the gesture, the look and the director has a real genius to let the what is left unsaid show through.

    As Romain slowly but surely makes his way towards the adamant death, there are flashes of his childhood which arrive in his mind. Maybe, they help him to accept his own death. Moreover, it is often said that old people behave like children. In a way Romain also behaves like a child, at least in the beginning of the movie, then, there's still time to become a grown-up.

    "Le Temps Qui Reste" is a small cracker which maybe won't cater for all tastes because of its thorny topic. But it has the merit to put aside formulaic or corny ingredients. As for Ozon, more power to him although it's very likely that like some of his fellows (Patrice Leconte), he'll still have to wait for a long time to receive the honors he deserves
    7secondtake

    Dying, slowly, too quickly, in a movie that is sometimes slow but absorbing

    Time to Leave (2005)

    Besides being interminably sad, even when it has shreds of love and hope and genuine friendship built in, Time to Leave is also a tonic and a balm. It makes the worst of situations reasonable. Not good, not desirable, but imaginable, which is something, too. It's an absorbing movie at its best, but is often slow and a hair predictable, within the range of themes in films of our era.

    As a movie, beyond the subject (which is what it is), there is a feeling of the ordinary even as the characters are often a bit beyond even extraordinary. The welcome spectre of Jeanne Moreau as his grandmother is great, and yet their relationship is tender to the point of incestuous. Maybe. And his love for his father, very touching, also trembles a little on the edge of beautiful liberalism. What I mean is, for all its touching, realistic touches, there are many moments that cut across the veneer that we are to believe. And it loses it's candid believability, leaning into an idealized sheen, without ever leaving it totally, into a fairy tale of some kind.

    So I didn't quite settle into the whole experience very well, and watched with impatience by halfway through. Maybe his lack of denouement is ours, as well, but that reminds me of art school when people with bad art would say something along the lines of, "I wanted it that way." Director Francois Ozon may have wanted this steady trauma and despair laced with love and deflated by the banal, but he could have also wanted something that left us viewers more fully moved, entranced, enlightened, or even, alas, puzzled. I was touched, in the end, by my own feelings and fear of dying, and of being surprised by its coming too soon, and the movie did less to illuminate that as to simple serve as a reminder about it, leaving the work, and the awfulness, up to me.
    8Pierre-Paris2

    Melvil Poupaud and the essentials

    Dying? Why? How? Do I have the chance to look at my own demise from where I'm standing and I'm given the chance, even if brief, to do what I can to arrive to the fatal randez-vous without a heavy heart. Is that possible? We live the question in painful, stunning moments of reflection. Melvil Poupaud's face is not merely beautiful but transparent. I decided very early one that he/his character and I were diametrically opposites and yet, I felt the communion, I was with him I sort of understood. I wept for him and for me, I wept for everyone I've lost and for all the ones I'm going to loose before I go. I've also decided that I like François Ozon very much. That his movies take me places in a brutally gentle way and I come out of this experiences with something new. Thank you very much.

    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      First feature film role for Christian Sengewald.
    • Erros de gravação
      The Canon IXUS i5 is not turned on when Romain uses it.
    • Citações

      Romain: In my dreams I'll sleep with anyone. My father, my mother... even myself as a kid. Guess I'm trying to do it all before dying.

    • Conexões
      Features Siren (2003)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Symphony no. 3
      Music by Arvo Pärt

      © C.F. Peters Music Publishers

      (p) 2002 EMI Records Ltd/Virgin Classics

      avec l'aimable autorisation de EMI Music France

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes19

    • How long is Time to Leave?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 30 de novembro de 2005 (França)
    • País de origem
      • França
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Official site (France)
    • Idiomas
      • Francês
      • Inglês
      • Alemão
    • Também conhecido como
      • Time to Leave
    • Locações de filme
      • Paris, França
    • Empresas de produção
      • Fidélité Productions
      • France 2 Cinéma
      • StudioCanal
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 117.686
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 20.717
      • 23 de jul. de 2006
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 2.893.462
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 21 min(81 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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