L'Empereur de Paris
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
6.6K
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Vidocq escapes captivity in 1805; years later he's a fabric merchant in Paris under an alias. He makes a deal of amnesty for catching criminals. He builds an efficient team of ex-cons to cat... Read allVidocq escapes captivity in 1805; years later he's a fabric merchant in Paris under an alias. He makes a deal of amnesty for catching criminals. He builds an efficient team of ex-cons to catch or kill them.Vidocq escapes captivity in 1805; years later he's a fabric merchant in Paris under an alias. He makes a deal of amnesty for catching criminals. He builds an efficient team of ex-cons to catch or kill them.
- Awards
- 3 nominations total
Jérôme Pouly
- Courtaud
- (as Jérôme Pouly de la Comédie Française)
Featured reviews
"Vidocq" (Vincent Cassel) is thriving amidst the underworld of Napoleonic France but having been wrongly convicted of murder and escaped from captivity, is keen to go straight and earn an amnesty from the government. That might be possible, but for that to happen he is going to have to co-operate with the embryonic Sûreté and help track down some insurgents. Needless to say, when rumours start to flow that he has turned his coat, the fraternity that was once his safe source of his anonymity now starts to make his life even more dangerous than his new task. Historically, this has it's roots in an actual man who was instrumental in setting up a French national police force, but as this goes, we are presented with a great looking drama that's really lacking in depth or characterisation. Save for a few potent appearances from Fabrice Luchini as the cynically duplicitous minister Fouché, the underused but still useful August Diehl's duplicitous Nathanaël and an enthusiastic effort from James Thiérrée as the dashing, cavalier-like Duc de Neufchâteau it's all a rather pedestrian affair that seems to imbue Vidocq with a certain degree of implausible immortality. Perhaps it is just simply trying to condense too much history into two hours but we never seem to get to know any of these folk; to get even the most basic understanding of what drove them nor of how precarious the whole French empire was at the time. It also tries too hard to involve us in half-cooked internecine plots that aren't properly explained or put into context, and so might as well be a few stand alone (and sometimes quite repetitive) episodes of "The Three Musketeers" meets "The Count of Monte Cristo". Cassel does own the part and the production designers and the armourers have done a great job creating a dark and gritty environment for this history to unfold, but believe it or not it can almost verge on the dull at times. There's a solid ensemble cast backing things up, but it's ultimately a bit of a meringue of a story - lots of topping but not much underneath.
It has many virtues. Vincent Cassel is the first. It has a huge potential , not real used in fair manner. And that reduced all to the clothes, fights and locations. The story is the lead victim because it is a too long film and, in same measure, all is reduced at sketches. But it works in decent way and, in essence , this is the important thing. A not awful kick to discover the real story of Vidocq. And that is all. .
L'Empereur de Paris is a nice movie that takes us back to the times of France under the rule of Napoleon. The great performing Vincent Cassel plays Francois Vidocq, an ex-con who hunts down the most notorious criminals of the Parisian underworld to get a pardon in return for his services.
Fantastic settings and costumes and a very good cast take us back in time and give us a relatively close authentic portrait of the era of Napoleon. Directed by Jean-François Richet (known for a broader audience for Blood Father with Mel Gibson, and the remake of Assault on Precinct 13 from 2005) The Emperor of Paris is a fine movie if you like to watch movies/stories like Les Misérables, The Count of Monte Cristo, Oliver Twist, The Duelists, Gangs of New York, and of course the Vidocq movie with Gérard Depardieu (2001).
A missed opportunity, if you know Vidocq's 'real' story (itself probably half-fiction), his skill at disguises and undercover work for instance. As it is, we end up with a period action drama which gleefully ignores how long it took to load period pistols to allow a number of Western style shoot-outs and various hand to hand combat, as well as at least two beautiful women to add romance. The result is somewhere between "The Count of Monte Christo" and "Cartouche", with hints of early nineteenth century political intrigue scattered all through it. There are felicities - the opening promises an earthy brutality which quickly disappears, and the views of period Paris seem well-researched. It's also a surprise to discover Olga Kurylenko, whom many Bond fans will know, but whom I last saw playing a beautiful Cuban dancer in "Magic City" as a sulphorous baronne (speaking perfect French). I hadn't seen Lucchini for decades, so was taken aback by his age. A fun film in many ways, but not really a film I would have watched had I known it was going to so blithely ignore the source material.
Did you know
- TriviaRegarding the fight scenes, director Jean-François Richet, lead actor Vincent Cassel and the choreographers tried to find a new, unidentifiable style.
- GoofsWhen Vidocq fights Nathanaël in the church and seizes his fist, in which the knife is still held, Vidocq's grip on the hand changes in between shots.
- ConnectionsReferences Scandale à Paris (1946)
- SoundtracksTe Deum
Music by Marc-Antoine Charpentier
- How long is The Emperor of Paris?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- The Emperor of Paris
- Filming locations
- Base 217, Brétigny-sur-Orge, Essonne, France(outdoor set for Paris street scenes)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €22,100,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $7,633,281
- Runtime
- 2h(120 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.40 : 1
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