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My Dinner with Andre

  • 1981
  • PG
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
29K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,905
1,302
My Dinner with Andre (1981)
Criterion Trailer
Play trailer0:56
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyDrama

Two old friends meet for dinner; as one tells anecdotes detailing his experiences, the other notices their differing worldviews.Two old friends meet for dinner; as one tells anecdotes detailing his experiences, the other notices their differing worldviews.Two old friends meet for dinner; as one tells anecdotes detailing his experiences, the other notices their differing worldviews.

  • Director
    • Louis Malle
  • Writers
    • Wallace Shawn
    • Andre Gregory
  • Stars
    • Andre Gregory
    • Wallace Shawn
    • Jean Lenauer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    29K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,905
    1,302
    • Director
      • Louis Malle
    • Writers
      • Wallace Shawn
      • Andre Gregory
    • Stars
      • Andre Gregory
      • Wallace Shawn
      • Jean Lenauer
    • 213User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    My Dinner With Andre
    Trailer 0:56
    My Dinner With Andre

    Photos129

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    Top cast5

    Edit
    Andre Gregory
    Andre Gregory
    • Andre Gregory
    Wallace Shawn
    Wallace Shawn
    • Wallace Shawn
    Jean Lenauer
    Jean Lenauer
    • Waiter
    Roy Butler
    • Bartender
    Deborah Eisenberg
    Deborah Eisenberg
    • Patron
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Louis Malle
    • Writers
      • Wallace Shawn
      • Andre Gregory
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews213

    7.728.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8kneiss1

    2 great storytellers keep you entertained through a 2 hours conversation

    This movie is mainly a conversation between 2 people. There isn't much music, barely any camera work, there actually is barely any acting because both actors play themselves!... it can barely be called a movie, but it still is one - and a very entertaining one at that. Both Actors have a gift for languages and are amazing story tellers. My native language is not English (you probably guessed it while reading this review), but even I have been amazed by the beautiful language and their amazing skill to talk.

    From a philosophical point of view, there is nothing new. I heard all the thoughts before. - The great strengths of the movie is the way those ideas are expressed. Even the most simple thought is coated by meaningful and beautiful words. You almost feel enlightened while watching this movie! But after the movie is over, you realize, that you actually learned nothing. It still has been a great experience. And I wished that there'd be more movies like this one.
    10zetes

    Look Closer

    First off, I love this film. I'm sure I will see it a dozen or more times before I die. Definitely a 10/10.

    But I comment for a different reason. Sure, you see the philosophy in the conversation. It is very interesting. What I think a lot of viewers are missing, though, is the strong characterizations of Wallace and Andre. They very clearly reveal their characters throughout the movie. I also love the tension that arises between them. Andre subtly criticizes Wally several times in the film (note what Andre says about people who stuff their face out of habit while Wallace is eating; also notice that we hardly ever see Andre himself eat). Wally is perceptive enough to catch them. This movie hit so close to home it was unbelievable. I think I've had that conversation before. The dynamics between Wallace and Andre have existed before between myself and friends with whom I have argued. If you find Andre a little pretentious, by the way, which many people will, don't necessarily believe that that wasn't deliberate. Wally himself finds his friend somewhat pretentious. And I think many people will be fooled into believing that the director sides with Andre just because he speaks the most. Some people will just buy into Andre's ideas and believe Wally is a poor sap. Don't be too sure that Wally has his life in any order. Don't believe he understands all that happens around him. Remember the line in Autumn Sonata that made him weep. Also, notice that Wally is fibbing a bit himself. In his opening monologue, he complains how hard his life is getting. All he used to think about was art, but now the only thing he thinks about is money.

    See, this film is filled, just stuffed, with layers. Who would ever think that the most multi-layered film ever is a film about two people who sit down to dinner and talk!
    8Afracious

    An original, unique, fascinating and intriguing conversation

    This is the tale of two different men: Andre, an avant-garde director, and Wally, a theatre actor and writer. They meet at a restaurant and philosophise and discuss a variety of subjects. The majority of the dialogue is spoken by Andre. He is a far more loquacious and complex character than Wally. Wally is a laconic and soft-spoken guy, who enjoys a simple life with his wife. His epitome of bliss is drinking a cold cup of coffee left from the night before, without finding a cockroach in it. Andre is an intense ponderer. He tells Wally the stories of his experiences travelling around the world, from his time spent in far flung places such as Scotland, Poland, India and Tibet. Andre gives the impression he is exaggerating at times. Is he fabricating some of the tales? He could be. Especially the ones where he claims he has seen monsters and weird creatures. The premise of two men conversing for 110 minutes at a dinner table is not going to be the most appealing film, but this film holds your attention and intrigues the viewer. You become involved with Andre's musings somehow, and just as fascinated as Wally is. A great piece of arresting cinema.
    10cinemaniac2002

    A Film For All Time

    There are movies made of every kind, of many different genres. While quite a few are entertaining, some films can actually be life changing. "My Dinner With Andre" is one of those films. I first saw the film in the early 1990s, around a decade after it was made. Caught in a vortex of corporate America office work drudgery as a single parent, the movie inspired me then to really examine my life and actively work to change it.

    I struggled to understand how a theater director (Andre) could ever become disenchanted with his life enough to drop out and search for more meaning. For me, the ability to do anything artistic to earn a living was a dream come true. As I watched the film, it became apparent how even someone in the arts could become disconnected - in fact, even more so than other people, who had resigned themselves to live the way that they were expected to according to standards they didn't agree with. I came away with the conclusion that it is the artists in society who have an obligation to cast truth's light on culture and how it affects humanity. This is a huge responsibility, and it is often frustrating for creative people to have to confront the mundane aspects of life which can create soul crushing circumstances, driving people to behave in the most inhumane of ways.

    Seeing the film again recently, it had a whole new meaning for me. Now that I am on the other side of the spiritually deadening life in corporate America - I can see how my goals and decisions to change my life were extremely necessary - in fact, imperative to my existence. Since the film was made, people have spent decades engaging in all manner of robotic and soul deadening activities - many to the detriment of themselves and everyone around them. We have also seen a technological surge that helped to liberate people to a certain degree, while further enslaving others. Regardless of which type of person one happens to be, at the end of the day, most everyone should work toward doing the things that give them joy - without harming others in the process. While this is much easier said than done, it doesn't make the goal any less important to accomplish. In fact, on a very basic level, it is just as necessary as eating, breathing and sleeping. Maybe even more significant, since human apathy, in its own way, can systematically destroy and sully the spirit driven intention of others.

    "My Dinner With Andre" is every bit as relevant now as when it first premiered, perhaps even more so. A conversation about the meaning of life and how people choose to live it, along with all of the outside forces that exist to complicate it, will never go out of style. This is a beautiful masterpiece of a film, that can be watched many times, to produce different points of view which provoke interesting, engaging and enlightening discussions by those who experience it. This is very apparent as Shawn's character, who on the surface seems to disagree with a lot of what Andre says. Yet by the end of the film, on his way home, his eyes observe things in his environment as though a new light was been cast upon them.
    10fideist

    Existential Paradox becomes Celluloid

    MY DINNER WITH ANDRE is one of the greatest movies of all time because it works on a seemingly infinite number of levels. Yet at the same time it is one of the biggest failures in film because it only succeeds in connecting to the most insightful of its audience. The resulting paradox only serves to prove the film's lesson to be true. Brilliant!

    This is either a movie you will turn off after fifteen minutes, or it is a movie you will watch over and over again to pick up all the things you missed in previous screenings. The former will be bored and lost by the endless, meaningless talk. The latter will find gold in every word, and veins left to be mined time after time.

    In simple terms, the question is understood "If life is a stage, are you going to be an actor, a director, or a playwright?" It is the viewer's choice. Wally is a struggling playwright who has fallen back on acting. Andre is a former actor and director who has left the theatre entirely. Wally and Andre meet for dinner, and Andre recounts his experiences since leaving the theatre.

    But one of the ironies is that their dinner itself is theatre, and both Andre and Wally have roles to fill. [Notice they wrote the script and use their real names. They are not playing characters. They are necessarily playing themselves.] And summarily the viewer also has a role to fill. If life is a stage, viewing the theatre is in itself theatre. The viewer is now in a place of choosing the role. And will that choice be made mechanically or deliberately? Mechanics is acting. Deliberation is playwrighting.

    This is a brilliant, brilliant film. One of the greatest movies of all time. And its resolve is purely subjective to the individual viewer. The goal is to deliberate and come away enlightened (literally). Unfortunately the majority of viewers will act mechanically and turn it off.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Wallace Shawn and Andre Gregory mention electric blankets as one of the negative examples of technology in the modern world. As it turned out, because of the overly cold set they had to work on, many of the cast and crew resorted to using them to stay warm.
    • Goofs
      In some scenes with the back of Wallace Shawn's head to the camera, the shadow of the boom mic can be seen on his bald head.
    • Quotes

      Andre: They've built their own prison, so they exist a state of schizophrenia. They're both guards and prisoners and as a result they no longer have, having been lobotomized, the capacity to leave the prison they've made, or to even see it as a prison.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Rollover, Quartet, My Dinner with Andre, Reds (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      First Gymnopédie
      Written by Erik Satie

      Performed by Joseph Villa

      [performed over the end credits]

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 2, 1983 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • My Dinner with André
    • Filming locations
      • Jefferson Hotel - 101 W. Franklin Street, Richmond, Virginia, USA
    • Production companies
      • Saga Productions Inc.
      • The Andre Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,073
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,073
      • May 16, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,073
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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