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French Postcards

  • 1979
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
878
YOUR RATING
French Postcards (1979)
ComedyDramaRomance

The believable, fresh-faced characters are naive American college students; armed with their French-English dictionaries they compulsively seek out hundreds of monuments, romanticize the nom... Read allThe believable, fresh-faced characters are naive American college students; armed with their French-English dictionaries they compulsively seek out hundreds of monuments, romanticize the nomadic artist's life, and look for grown-up love.The believable, fresh-faced characters are naive American college students; armed with their French-English dictionaries they compulsively seek out hundreds of monuments, romanticize the nomadic artist's life, and look for grown-up love.

  • Director
    • Willard Huyck
  • Writers
    • Willard Huyck
    • Gloria Katz
  • Stars
    • Miles Chapin
    • Blanche Baker
    • David Marshall Grant
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    878
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Willard Huyck
    • Writers
      • Willard Huyck
      • Gloria Katz
    • Stars
      • Miles Chapin
      • Blanche Baker
      • David Marshall Grant
    • 21User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos19

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Miles Chapin
    Miles Chapin
    • Joel
    Blanche Baker
    Blanche Baker
    • Laura
    David Marshall Grant
    David Marshall Grant
    • Alex
    Valérie Quennessen
    Valérie Quennessen
    • Toni
    Debra Winger
    Debra Winger
    • Melanie
    Mandy Patinkin
    Mandy Patinkin
    • Sayyid
    Marie-France Pisier
    Marie-France Pisier
    • Madame Catherine Tessier
    Jean Rochefort
    Jean Rochefort
    • Monsieur Tessier
    Lynn Carlin
    Lynn Carlin
    • Mrs. Weber
    George Coe
    George Coe
    • Mr. Weber
    Christophe Bourseiller
    Christophe Bourseiller
    • Pascal
    François Lalande
    • Monsieur Levert
    Anémone
    Anémone
    • Christine
    Véronique Jannot
    Véronique Jannot
    • Malsy
    Marie-Anne Chazel
    Marie-Anne Chazel
    • Cécile
    Laurence Lignières
    • Madame Levert
    • (as Laurence Lignères)
    André Penvern
    André Penvern
    • Jean-Louis
    Jacques Rispal
    Jacques Rispal
    • Director
      • Willard Huyck
    • Writers
      • Willard Huyck
      • Gloria Katz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    5.8878
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    Featured reviews

    10jamieric

    Delightful fluff... look for stars-to-be

    "French Postcards" is a light-hearted romantic comedy that was probably seen by more people on cable TV than in the theater.

    Two rising stars have supporting roles in this film.

    Mandy Patinkin plays "Sayyid." He won a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for playing Che Guevera in "Evita" on Broadway in 1979... the same year "French Postcards" was released. He went on to star opposite Barbra Streisand in the film "Yentl," and to act in many other movies including another favorite of mine, "The Princess Bride." He's appeared in numerous Broadway productions and also played for years in the TV series "Chicago Hope."

    The other actor to watch for is Debra Winger who plays "Melanie." She went on to roles in "Urban Cowboy," "An Officer and a Gentleman," and "Terms of Endearment," and is a three-time Oscar nominee.

    As a reporter, I got to interview Winger when "Cannery Row" was released and asked her about her memories of "French Postcards." She said she was not happy about the way the film turned out because "Melanie" apparently played a much larger role in the original script as shot. She felt too much of her work was left on the cutting room floor during editing, and that her major character had been relegated to a lesser role. Judging from what's happened since, she was probably right.

    After "French Postcards," Willard Huyck went on to direct the bombs "Best Defense," and "Howard the Duck."
    atlantic965

    MY FAVORITE COMING OF AGE MOVIE

    I first saw this film in 1979 when it appeared on HBO. And it is MY coming of age movie. I found the tape recently in a video store and it brought back many happy memories. I was sad to learn Valérie Quennessen was killed in an auto accident in 1989. She was a beautiful and talented actress. Marie-France Pisier is still one of the most beautiful women I have ever seen, the one actor, who in my opinion, steals the movie is the great French actor Jean Rochefort who plays Monsieur Tessier. I sometimes cannot believe 22 years have passed since I first saw this movie. A must See !!
    7Weirdling_Wolf

    The garishly goofy 'French Postcards' gets my stamp of approval!

    This fitfully flavoursome fromage about a naïve group of over-excitable American students experiencing a modestly hedonistic year of wine, women, and deliciously bad French rock music at a school in picturesque Paris, perhaps, offers the more forgiving, farce-minded viewers some fairly stale Poisson out of water shtick. These disparate, moderately endearing student protagonists 'studying' at the somewhat less-than august-looking 'Institute of French Studies' predictably fall into distinctly pre-digested food groups, the lonely, uptight wasp busybody (Blanche Baker), the nebbish nerd that somewhat miraculously gets the lava-hot mademoiselle (Miles Chapin), the self-appointed, would-be artisan Lothario (David Marshall Grant) who frustratingly gets the bums rush, and a youthful, barely used, quick-quipping Debra Winger form the savoury base of this salty bouillabaisse! There are noisome, sardonic skits about eating snails, clunky ruminations about the myriad, meaningless miasmas of human existence, a smattering of not so amiable couplings, some bemusingly bad, frisson-less bedroom farcing about, and a scintillatingly sexy sprinkle of groovy Gallic disco, plus an abjectly awful cameo by Mandy Patinkin as a skeezoid Iranian on the make, and legendary French Thespian Jean Rochefort's justifiably acerbic disdain for his students seems wholly genuine, and Huyck's sickly saccharine conclusion is nauseatingly glib, but, for reasons that momentarily elude me, there is something weirdly edifying about the ingenuous Miles Chapin heroically hooking up with a sublimely frisky French hottie (Valérie Quennessen), so, maybe, I somewhat reluctantly enjoyed the benign, wholesomely fluffy-headed frolics in 'French Postcards' a little more than I would be prepared to admit in public! The garishly goofy 'French Postcards gets my stamp of approval! All winsome word-japery aside, I genuinely dug on Lee Holdrige's magnifique score, and the gracefully beautiful Marie-France Pisier is truly mesmerizing to behold as wet dream supreme, the triumphantly titillating teacher Madame Catherine Tessier!
    briankistler

    So Near & Dear To My Heart

    I would not give this film a lukewarm review at all (as some of the other reviews that I have read seem to have done). I would not try to put it in a box that it does not belong in, either. The truth of the matter is, I LOVED "French Postcards" exactly the way it was!! This was a highly entertaining and WONDERFUL story! I felt really good after watching it..........I watched it twice. In short, I thoroughly enjoyed it!

    I felt that a lot of the main characters were very well drawn and believable. The acting was, by and large, superb! My favorite story within this story would have to be the one with Alex (the blond-haired American student and pianist) and Madame Tessier (the French director of the institute, where the American exchange students were enrolled). I especially like the very beautiful and adorable Mme. Tessier, played by Marie-France Pisier. It wasn't just that she was totally gorgeous as a "somewhat older woman" (Alex was a junior in college; Mme. Tessier was probably in her mid 30s). It was very admirable how passionate she was about her study abroad program. She appeared to be extremely devoted to her job.........and very professional. Toward the end of the movie she talked about her plan to open up schools all over France........and she was very excited about it.

    I also liked that scene when she and Alex's girlfriend got into a cat fight over whose man Alex really was..........but even then, she still carried that off with a lot of class. She did not scream or make a scene. She seemed to hold her own, toe to toe, with Alex's old girlfriend with dignity. Among other things, she told her (in a very relaxed voice):

    "You are a twenty-year-old school girl..........You don't know anything about love!"

    If you have not yet seen the movie, you should know that Mme. Tessier certainly made Alex pay his dues! He worked extremely hard to earn the right to show his affections for her. She was really quite cold, in the beginning, and did try to dissuade him...........even lied to him that she did not like a piano song that he wrote for her (about Paris). Eventually she took the bait (and probably amazed Alex in the process). The story does paint Mme. Tessier as a very dedicated and serious, professional, French woman: a woman, who one day just had a weakness and caved............and allowed herself to become vulnerable in the arms, and in the heart, of a twenty-something American "stud". Though for many people it might be disturbing, that her involvement with him is adulterous (her husband is her business partner at the institute), in many ways it is a very sweet romance. There are actually quite a few things that are sweet (or delightful) about this movie (including a shot of the beautiful Seine river at sunset).

    I saw this movie on HBO in December 1980------just weeks before I was slated to go off to Spain as an American college student (I spent my spring semester in Sevilla, Spain). Though this movie was about a very different country, it was still about a European country. It was extremely exciting for me to watch two hours of anecdotes, concerning experiences that I was very soon to be having (at least some of them, anyway; I did not try to steal away a program director's wife!)! Watching this film was even more delightful for me, since this was to be my first trip to Europe!

    I am sure that I would have enjoyed this movie, almost as much, even if I had not studied abroad. On a personal note, I never made it to France, during my stay in Spain. It would be 17+ years later, before I trod on many of the same grounds that Alex, Joel, and Melanie trod (in "French Postcards"). I am pleased to say that my 1998 trip to France was everything that I thought it would be! The people were totally wonderful and delightful..........and I just loved them! More importantly, I loved France (just as I loved Mme. Tessier and "French Postcards", as a whole)!
    7Hermit C-2

    A pleasant diversion.

    This is the kind of movie the term "lighthearted" was made for. A group of American students is attending school in Paris and spending their time running around seeing the sights and finding new loves. The script may not be perfect but it's a fun and enjoyable time.

    The best thing this movie has going for it is the fine French actress (and stunning beauty) Marie France-Pisier, who plays the school's headmistress and the object of one of the young men's attention and affection. Also good in this film is Blanche Baker, an underappreciated actress.

    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film's closing credits state: "Special thanks to the American students in Paris, 1978-1979".
    • Quotes

      Toni: You know, I don't understand anything you are saying.

      Joel: Don't you speak French?

      Toni: Not your French.

    • Alternate versions
      Due to music licensing disputes, the 1986 Paramount home video edition of this film contains almost completely different French-language pop songs as compared to the theatrical and cable television editions. Similarly, in 1984 NBC-TV ran a version that featured previously discarded footage of Debra Winger, who by then had become a major star.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: French Postcards/The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh/The Marriage of Maria Braun/The Rose/Best Boy (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      J'Écoute de la Musique Saoule
      Music by Gabriel Yared

      Lyrics by Michel Jonasz

      Performed by Françoise Hardy

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 20, 1980 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • West Germany
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Wer geht denn noch zur Uni?
    • Filming locations
      • Pere Lachaise cemetery, 20e arrondissement, France(Laura leaving flowers on the graves of Collette & Édith Piaf.)
    • Production company
      • NF Geria II Filmgesellschaft m.b.H.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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