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IMDbPro

Plaire, aimer et courir vite

  • 2018
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 12m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
4.4K
YOUR RATING
Pierre Deladonchamps and Vincent Lacoste in Plaire, aimer et courir vite (2018)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:28
1 Video
43 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

Jacques is a 35-year-old writer from Paris. Arthur is a young student in Rennes. They instantly fall in love. But they'll have to face sickness to keep it that way.Jacques is a 35-year-old writer from Paris. Arthur is a young student in Rennes. They instantly fall in love. But they'll have to face sickness to keep it that way.Jacques is a 35-year-old writer from Paris. Arthur is a young student in Rennes. They instantly fall in love. But they'll have to face sickness to keep it that way.

  • Director
    • Christophe Honoré
  • Writer
    • Christophe Honoré
  • Stars
    • Vincent Lacoste
    • Pierre Deladonchamps
    • Denis Podalydès
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    4.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Christophe Honoré
    • Writer
      • Christophe Honoré
    • Stars
      • Vincent Lacoste
      • Pierre Deladonchamps
      • Denis Podalydès
    • 20User reviews
    • 65Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:28
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos43

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    + 37
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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Vincent Lacoste
    Vincent Lacoste
    • Arthur Prigent
    Pierre Deladonchamps
    Pierre Deladonchamps
    • Jacques Tondelli
    Denis Podalydès
    Denis Podalydès
    • Mathieu
    Adèle Wismes
    • Nadine
    Thomas Gonzalez
    • Marco
    Clément Métayer
    Clément Métayer
    • Pierre
    Quentin Thébault
    Quentin Thébault
    • Jean-Marie
    Tristan Farge
    • Louis
    Sophie Letourneur
    Sophie Letourneur
    • Isabelle
    Marlene Saldana
    Marlene Saldana
    • L'actrice
    • (as Marlène Saldana)
    Luca Malinowski
    • Stéphane
    Rio Vega
    • Fabrice
    Loïc Mobihan
    • Le docteur
    Mathilda Doucouré
    Eric Vigner
    Tibo Drouet
    • Mathieu's Date
    Jean Frédérique Lemoues
      Teddy Bogaert
      • Director
        • Christophe Honoré
      • Writer
        • Christophe Honoré
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews20

      6.84.4K
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      Featured reviews

      5MOscarbradley

      Well made and acted but not an easy film to like.

      Fundamentally ordinary yet incredibly self-centered, the characters in Christophe Honore's "Sorry, Angel" are not easy people to like. They are mostly a group of gay and bisexual men with complicated lives who find that relationships aren't necessarily what they're good at; even having a job, earning a living or just being 'themselves' also seem to pose a problem. The two main characters are Jacques, a writer in his thirties, (Pierre Deladonchamps), and Arthur, (Vincent Lacoste), a younger student, who meet, have sex and then go about the business of falling in love but find 'happy ever after' something of a pipedream.

      It's territory Honore has explored before and more explicitly but this well-crafted, if overtly cool, movie represents something of a step forward if only in terms of style. This is a more formal, less kinetic, Honore but one still unable to shake off that sense of ennui. The performances are excellent but the characters aren't engaging. Also setting it at a time when AIDS was more prevalent than it is now seems like an unnecessary plot device rather than an attempt to get us to understand or care more about the people we see. Throw in a girlfriend and Jacques' young son and you get the impression that Honore is going out of his way to be 'cool' as if making a gay epic but one without a centre. Add a load of references to cinema and literature and you know exactly who this is aimed at. One for the fans, i'm afraid.
      Kirpianuscus

      stories

      Maybe, the fundamental virtue of film is to demonstrate nothing. It is only a story about relationship, about choices, love, life, happiness and fall. Not for impress, not for be manifesto, it seems more a sort of confession to the viewer, exploration of pieces of life, delicate confesions and easy portraits of the imposibility to be the expected one by the other and invitation to discover, from other perspective, the life. No doubts, a beautiful film but, unfortunatelly, not the most convincing. But nice.
      6bob998

      Aimless, sometimes interesting

      Christophe Honore is a director who has never interested me much; Dans Paris was a bore, and most of his features haven't played in North America. He has talent, but not a narrative sense. His actors carry the movie along, but even they can't do anything about the last 30 minutes, which are a total waste of time.

      Setting the story in 1993, with ACT-UP just starting in France, we are fed disjointed scenes with characters who drift in and out of the action. Pierre Deladonchamps is convincing as Jacques, and Denys Podalydes has some cynical and funny scenes. I'd really like to try Chouchen, the Breton liqueur.
      10alanh20004

      Honore's Most Personal, Accessible, and Divisive Film

      The person who saw Sorry Angel with me initially mislabeled it as another gay-AIDS-relationship movie, missing the point: It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it. Christophe Honore never lacks ideas, and--to his good fortune--he does what he pleases. He takes risks and successfully avoids cliches; Honore is one of the world's brightest, funniest, savvy auteurs...His movies are earmarked by nostalgic romanticism, but they never wallow in the past because he is able to pay tribute without imitation, a technique that evades so many of his contemporaries.

      Sorry Angel is about relationships. You do not need to be gay to watch it, but you need to understand humanity and compassion. Honore gets to the meat without chewing on the fat while his poignant dialogue is relatable to everyone eventually. The context of the movie (the 90's AIDS epidemic) is a setting for the text (based on the director's university years and his gay idols, writers and directors who died from the disease) but it is the subtext, Honore's observations about relationships--discerning, unsentimental, realistic portrayals of humans both gay and straight--which elevates the movie to the forefront of cinematic reflections. Where Robin Campillo's recent BPM (another stunner) focuses on activism, Honore shows us sympathy and love during an era of uncertainty and chaos.

      Jonathan Romney notes that Sorry Angel is a "novelistic film" because it presents itself like great literature. The plot might be purposefully transparent, but the devil is in the details.
      7jromanbaker

      Sorry Angel is not a good title.

      To Please, to Love, and to Run Quickly is nowhere near the sentimental use of the word sorry, and who is the angel? I also dislike the three in a bed image used on the poster as it bears little resemblance to the content of the film. I will give no spoilers, but I did not see one sexual threesome. and to be honest the sexuality in the film was coy and of the 'hide the penis at all costs' school. For those who have read my reviews please see the one on 'Theo and Hugo'.

      I have awarded this film 7/10 because I thought it was a good film but not as good as it could have been. The dialogue in French is brutally difficult to follow as there is a lot of slurping over words and saying things in a way that you can only truly follow if you are in the same room with the people speaking, and then .... I found the characters drab, and the bisexual Breton tiresome.

      And now for a major criticism about films set in the past about Aids. Where were the films during that period of the crisis? This retro look back makes me angry. Film makers should have had the courage back then to deal with this period in our history. Films like 'Theo and Hugo' are masterful as they deal with the situation now and are up to date. One reviewer here summed this up for me. He or she says, love-and romanticism-in the days of AIDS. In the days of? This is not a past thing. The days are now. Homosexuality and HIV are now. And yes as a friend of mine said, they need to know how it was, but frankly with a still on-going crisis we need to know how it IS.

      One good element of this film is that it shows a child in a homosexual household in a positive way, and despite my slight boredom with the relationships, it is at least about an important issue. French film is waking up to homosexuality thanks to a list of good directors, and the dark negativity of the Nouvelle Vague, where love was strictly heterosexual, has slipped back into the waters from where it came. The Nouvelle Vague liberated image, but was feeble on diversity and dodgy on politics. Honore is a great director, but I am still waiting for his great film.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The character of Jacques (Pierre Deladonchamps) shares his surname with Pier Vittorio Tondelli, an Italian author who died of AIDS.
      • Quotes

        Pierre: Cruelty is not one man wounding another, mutilating or torturing him, severing his limbs or his head, or even making him cry. The true, terrible cruelty is that a man who cuts another off, interrupting him like dots in a sentence, or looking away from him, making him an error of the gaze, an error of judgement, an error like a letter crumpled up after starting it, after writing the date.

      • Connections
        Features La Leçon de piano (1993)
      • Soundtracks
        One Love
        Performed by Massive Attack

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      FAQ16

      • How long is Sorry Angel?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • May 10, 2018 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • France
      • Official sites
        • Ad Vitam Distribution (France)
        • Cinéart (Belgium)
      • Language
        • French
      • Also known as
        • Plaire, Baiser et Courir Vite
      • Filming locations
        • Binic-Étables-sur-Mer, Côtes-d'Armor, France(location)
      • Production companies
        • Les Films Pelléas
        • Arte France Cinéma
        • Canal+
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • €3,610,000 (estimated)
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $30,628
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $6,559
        • Feb 17, 2019
      • Gross worldwide
        • $1,636,273
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 2h 12m(132 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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