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Certaines femmes

Original title: Certain Women
  • 2016
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
17K
YOUR RATING
Laura Dern, Kristen Stewart, Michelle Williams, and Lily Gladstone in Certaines femmes (2016)
Set against the Big Sky backdrop of southern Montana and reflecting both the immense scope and profound stillness of its setting, 'Certain Women' examines the moments both large and small that make up the lives of strong, independent women looking for ways to understand and shape the world around them.
Play trailer2:06
3 Videos
78 Photos
Workplace DramaDrama

The lives of four women intersect in small-town America, where each is imperfectly blazing a trail.The lives of four women intersect in small-town America, where each is imperfectly blazing a trail.The lives of four women intersect in small-town America, where each is imperfectly blazing a trail.

  • Director
    • Kelly Reichardt
  • Writers
    • Kelly Reichardt
    • Maile Meloy
  • Stars
    • Michelle Williams
    • Kristen Stewart
    • Laura Dern
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    17K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Kelly Reichardt
    • Writers
      • Kelly Reichardt
      • Maile Meloy
    • Stars
      • Michelle Williams
      • Kristen Stewart
      • Laura Dern
    • 115User reviews
    • 168Critic reviews
    • 82Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 11 wins & 49 nominations total

    Videos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Official Trailer
    Certain Women--Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Certain Women--Official Trailer
    Certain Women--Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Certain Women--Official Trailer
    5 Indie Film Gems of Kristen Stewart
    Clip 1:01
    5 Indie Film Gems of Kristen Stewart

    Photos77

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Michelle Williams
    Michelle Williams
    • Gina
    Kristen Stewart
    Kristen Stewart
    • Elizabeth Travis
    Laura Dern
    Laura Dern
    • Laura
    James Le Gros
    James Le Gros
    • Ryan
    Jared Harris
    Jared Harris
    • Fuller
    Ashlie Atkinson
    Ashlie Atkinson
    • Secretary
    Guy Boyd
    Guy Boyd
    • Personal Injury Lawyer
    Edelen McWilliams
    Edelen McWilliams
    • Fuller's Wife
    John Getz
    John Getz
    • Sheriff Rowles
    James Jordan
    James Jordan
    • Hostage Specialist
    Matt McTighe
    Matt McTighe
    • Officer Tommy Carroll
    Joshua T. Fonokalafi
    • Amituana
    Sara Twist
    Sara Twist
    • Guthrie
    • (as Sara Rodier)
    Rene Auberjonois
    Rene Auberjonois
    • Albert
    Lily Gladstone
    Lily Gladstone
    • The Rancher
    Stephanie Campbell
    • Teacher 1
    Kilty Reidy
    • Teacher 2
    Marceline Hugot
    Marceline Hugot
    • Teacher 3
    • Director
      • Kelly Reichardt
    • Writers
      • Kelly Reichardt
      • Maile Meloy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews115

    6.416.6K
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    Featured reviews

    JohnDeSando

    Strong women, weak men, strong story.

    Director Kelly Reicart knows strong women and the strong circumstances they've faced moving West (Meek's Cutoff) and more than 100 years later the modern Northwest (Certain Women). Big Sky Country, Montana, is the modern setting: Billings, Bozeman, and environs, the places where three women are ignored by men, misunderstood by both men and women, and call many of the shots that may end up putting food on their tables and courage in their hearts.

    Although feminists should be proud of the three heroines in Certain Women, their actions are not so much the stuff of heroics as they mostly navigate around misogyny and sloth in a world that mostly listens to men first even if the women are right most of the time.

    Laura Wells (Laura Dern) is an attorney with not really a thriving practice, but she gets along. One client, Fuller (Jared Harris), is a worker trying in vain to get more compensation for an accident while he slowly becomes derailed. In the most fraught incident of the trilogy, she must enter a building with a bullet-proof vest to face him as he holds a guard hostage. That she is the one to confront him, and not a crisis squad, is one of the stories' touches that clarifies why the heroines are "certain" women.

    Gina Lewis (Michelle Williams) is building a prairie house, part of which will be built with a pile of stones, she, not her husband, tries to convince an old man to sell. Her quiet resolve in the face of mostly feckless men is not so much heroic as it is her certainty that she must be the strong one.

    Jamie (Lily Gladstone), a portly ranch hand who falls for an evening school teacher-lawyer, Beth Travis (Kristen Stewart), is the least glamorous of the three (no I Phone for this cowgirl) but with an inner depth that eclipses the other two. Jamie and Beth's evening ride to the diner on a horse is romantic in a subtle way rarely seen before.

    If you think I haven't described anything dramatically worthy of a full-length motion picture, you're right. The real drama bleeds out of the actors' interior depictions, the personal strength that overcomes diminishment by the vast plains, snow-capped mountains, and weak men.

    Because the three episodes are derived from native Maile Maloy's short stories, Certain Women is a tour de force of feminism disguised as rambling stories of women making a hard living in a hard West. Hooray for them as the cowboys and the horses are not the real forces at work.
    3eyasta

    There are limits...

    I appreciate a pretty wide variety of films. I wouldn't call myself an indie junkie, but I like creativity that gets me to think or be aware in a new way and indie can certainly do that. Of course, sometimes aspects of a film will evade me (what was X about? what did Y mean?) and then I seek out others--and IMDb--to fill in the gaps.

    I have to admit, I left this film lost and unsatisfied. Too MUCH of it was a gap for me. Sure, I had some basic insights: how the normal-ness of life is worthy of attention and how the painful constancy of loneliness exists in so many lives. The acting was good. I found the long pans and the "un-action" movie action interesting. At least for a while. But by about halfway, that was it. Those insights just repeated themselves. I spent the second half hoping for something to shed light, to at least tie some loose ends together. But it never came.

    And it wasn't just me and my friend. As we sat in the emptying theater after the movie, discussing our thoughts about it, an elderly lady shuffled out behind us and said, "I don't mean to blow my own horn, but I have a Ph.D. in English Literature. And STILL I can't figure out what that movie was about! Do you?" So it wasn't just me.

    This is all I can conclude: This film slowly detailed 3 vignettes, suggesting there was something being told. Then it had nothing to say. Maybe it's a Zen thing. But it wasn't a satisfying experience for me. The stories came out of nowhere and went nowhere, albeit with some beautiful scenes and emotions presented along the way and excellent acting. When it was over, there was no "there" there for me. I think that's what left me feeling unsatisfied. It was like a pretty mosaic left in pieces. I can infer that someone formed a design with it and I want to see that design. But it's in pieces and, try as I might, I can't put the pieces together. In fact, it feels like some pieces are missing. So I walk away baffled.

    Maybe this says more about me than this movie. Whatever the case, I walked away unsettled and not in an enlightened way. That didn't feel good.
    8paul-allaer

    The art of story telling about ordinary lives

    "Certain Women" (2016 release; 107 min.) brings several stories about ordinary women in a remote community in Montana. As the movie opens, we get to know Laura Wells, a lawyer who just had a quickie with her lover over lunch time ("I had a meeting", she says to her assistant upon getting back to the office). Waiting for Laura is a disgruntled client, who feels he's been cheated out of an injury settlement he feels he's entitled to. An exasperated Laura decides to take him to another lawyer for a second opinion. At this point we're 10 min. into the movie but to tell you more of the plot would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: this is the latest movie from writer-director-editor Kelly Reichardt, the acclaimed indie movie director who previously brought us "Wendy & Lucy" and "Meek's Cutoff" (both starring Michelle Williams, who returns here as well). The movie brings three basically unrelated stories (based on Maile Meloy's collection "Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It"), and they all involve very ordinary people and ordinary lives that are shook up in one way or another (I'm biting my lips here, but won't spoil anything). The first story stars Laura Dern as the lawyer and Jared Harris as the disgruntled client; the second story stars Michelle Williams as the wife/mother in a strained marriage. The best, though, is saved for last, when we watch with fascination (and heartbreak) what unfolds between Kristen Stewart (as the Livingston, MT lawyer teaching a school law class in faraway Belfry, MT) and Lily Gladsone (as the lonesome horse rancher attending the class). I cannot recall seeing Kristen Stewart being more authentic in any previous role, even as compared to her roles in, say, "On the Road" or "The Runaways". Another major plus for the movie is that Reichardt lets a scene develop. Certain camera shots seemingly last forever. I don't mean to be snobby, but one of the reviews posted here gives this movie the lowest possible rating and compares it to 'watching paint dry'. I feel rather sorry for that person that he or she cannot appreciate a high quality movie like "Certain Women" (it is not a coincidence that this is rated 96% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes).

    "Certain Women" premiered at the Sundance film festival earlier this year to great acclaim, and finally opened this past weekend at my local art-house theater here in Cincinnati. The Tuesday evening screening where I saw this at was attended very nicely, and you could hear a pin drop during much of the movie, as the audience seemed glued to their seat and the big screen. If you are in the mood for a top-notch indie movie with several great character studies and correlating outstanding acting performances, you cannot go wrong with this. "Certain Women" is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
    8ferguson-6

    the power of stillness

    Greetings again from the darkness. This is surely one of the most intriguing movies of the year that is about women and by a woman. Writer/director Kelly Reichardt (Wendy and Lucy, 2008) has adapted the short stories from Maile Meloy into a film with 3 segments focusing on the daily perseverance of three women in small town Montana (including a rare Wyoming joke).

    The first segment has lawyer Laura Dern returning to the office after an … umm … "long lunch meeting". Waiting for her is her client played by Jared Harris ("Mad Men"). The frustration between the two is palpable. Things take a turn for the worse as the sheriff calls Dern to the scene where Harris has taken a hostage at gunpoint. The issues on display here include the lack of respect for a female attorney, her unsatisfying personal life, and the one-way trust that can happen in times of desperation.

    In the next story, we follow Michelle Williams and her husband James LeGros as they meet with a lonely elderly neighbor (Rene Auberjonis) and offer to buy some limestone blocks that have been sitting on his property for decades. The subtlety of the conversation embodies the missing respect and power of Ms. Williams' character.

    Emotions are exploding beneath the surface in the third segment featuring horse handler Lily Gladstone as she stumbles into a class being taught by Kristen Stewart, and is immediately captivated by the smart young teacher. Where this attraction leads is further commentary on the challenges faced by those trying to escape the daily drudgery of their lives.

    The above recaps don't come close to capturing the extraordinary quiet and stillness that director Reichardt uses in an emotionally powerful manner. These three women are all intelligent and filled with both pride and visceral disappointment … each quietly suffering, yet trudging forward with the emptiness each day brings. They each have a feeling of isolation – even if they aren't truly alone, and failed or lackluster relationships certainly play a role.

    The acting and cinematography (film, not digital!) is as expert as the directing. Ms. Gladstone is truly a standout by saying few words out loud, but speaking volumes with her open and pleading eyes. The nuance of each scene is where the most interest is, and the overall mood of the characters and tone of the stories overcome the fact that we are plopped into these lives with little or no backstory. As each one softly crashes (two figuratively, one literally), we understand these are the faces of strong women who will continue to do what's necessary … even if that's shoveling horse poop. The film is dedicated to Ms. Reichardt's dog Lucy (a key to her personal and professional life).
    5eddie_baggins

    A slow drama that fails to fully engage

    It doesn't seem as though indie darling Kelly Reichardt will be changing her directing tact anytime soon.

    Becoming well known for her intimate, slow-moving and character driven character studies (that more often than not star Michelle Williams), Reichardt's film aren't for everyone but there is often a quiet power to Reichardt's stories that can't be denied.

    Hitting a peak with lost dog drama Wendy and Lucy and losing her way with the sleep inducing female driven western Meek's Cutoff, Certain Women is middle of the road Reichardt that see's the Florida born filmmaker examine the lives of 3 separate women in the American state of Montana, each going through their own various journey's in this great big world.

    There's barely an ounce of character development or backstory as we're thrust into these women's everyday lives, from Laura Dern's lawyer Laura dealings with Jared Harris's potentially dangerous client Fuller, Michelle William's hardworking mother and wife Gina and Lily Gladstone's The Rancher's strange fondness for Kristin Stewart's class instructor Elizabeth and while these women's stories are intriguing to a sense, there's never a good enough set-up or reward to truly make this intertwining story truly memorable.

    As per usual with a Reichardt film, Certain Women looks great in a quietly poetic way and the acting is universally good, without ever delivering any big character moments or situations for Reichardt's cast to shine at their brightest levels but it's hard to fully invest yourself into a film that feels rather emotionally cold and a problem that sometimes manifests itself in such narrative structures, some of Certain Women's most interesting plot points seem to end as we're thrust back into another characters life, making us feel as though we're being a little ripped off by a story that had more to give us.

    Final Say –

    Reichardt's ponderous and deliberately paced drama will be a treat for her small yet passionate fan base while for the rest of us, Certain Women is a well-intentioned and finely acted drama that never hooks us into its world in a way that would've made it more readily accessible and easily recommendable.

    2 ½ short-legged farm dogs out of 5

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Reichardt revealed that one of the reasons she chose to shoot on film was because snow appears "flat" in other formats. Interestingly enough, when she began shooting, there was little to no snow at all in Montana.
    • Goofs
      When Elizabeth Travis first starts her school law course, she begins writing her name as "Eliz..." on the blackboard, then wipes it out and simply writes "Beth". A little later a fully written but crossed out "Elizabeth" appears next to the "Beth".
    • Quotes

      Laura: It'd be so lovely to think that if I were a man I could explain the law and people would listen and say, "Okay."

    • Connections
      Featured in Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Play with My Heart
      Performed by Taye Johnson

      Courtesy of Yebo Music by arrangement with Bank Robber Music

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Certain Women?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 22, 2017 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ciertas mujeres
    • Filming locations
      • Livingston, Montana, USA(law offices at 116 Callender St. and 110 B South St.)
    • Production companies
      • Film Science
      • Glass Eye Pix
      • Stage 6 Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,087,585
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $60,898
      • Oct 16, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,531,261
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Laura Dern, Kristen Stewart, Michelle Williams, and Lily Gladstone in Certaines femmes (2016)
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