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Rimbaud Verlaine

Original title: Total Eclipse
  • 1995
  • R
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
17K
YOUR RATING
Leonardo DiCaprio, David Thewlis, and Romane Bohringer in Rimbaud Verlaine (1995)
Home Video Trailer from Fine Line
Play trailer1:46
1 Video
47 Photos
Period DramaBiographyDramaRomance

Young, wild poet Arthur Rimbaud and his mentor Paul Verlaine engage in a fierce, forbidden romance while feeling the effects of a hellish artistic lifestyle.Young, wild poet Arthur Rimbaud and his mentor Paul Verlaine engage in a fierce, forbidden romance while feeling the effects of a hellish artistic lifestyle.Young, wild poet Arthur Rimbaud and his mentor Paul Verlaine engage in a fierce, forbidden romance while feeling the effects of a hellish artistic lifestyle.

  • Director
    • Agnieszka Holland
  • Writer
    • Christopher Hampton
  • Stars
    • Leonardo DiCaprio
    • David Thewlis
    • Romane Bohringer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    17K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Agnieszka Holland
    • Writer
      • Christopher Hampton
    • Stars
      • Leonardo DiCaprio
      • David Thewlis
      • Romane Bohringer
    • 88User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
    • 42Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Total Eclipse
    Trailer 1:46
    Total Eclipse

    Photos47

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    Leonardo DiCaprio
    • Arthur Rimbaud
    David Thewlis
    David Thewlis
    • Paul Verlaine
    Romane Bohringer
    Romane Bohringer
    • Mathilde Maute
    Dominique Blanc
    Dominique Blanc
    • Isabelle Rimbaud
    Félicie Pasotti
    • Isabelle, as a child
    • (as Felicie Pasotti Cabarbaye)
    Nita Klein
    Nita Klein
    • Rimbaud's Mother
    James Thierrée
    • Frederic
    • (as James Thiérrée)
    Emmanuelle Oppo
    • Vitalie
    Denise Chalem
    • Mrs. Maute De Fleurville
    Andrzej Seweryn
    Andrzej Seweryn
    • Mr. Maute De Fleurville
    Christopher Thompson
    • Carjat
    Bruce Van Barthold
    Bruce Van Barthold
    • Aicard
    Christopher Chaplin
    Christopher Chaplin
    • Charles Cros
    Christopher Hampton
    Christopher Hampton
    • The Judge
    Mathias Jung
    • Andre
    Kettly Noël
    Kettly Noël
    • Somalian Woman
    Cheb Han
    • Djami
    Aza Declercq
    Aza Declercq
    • Prostitute
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Agnieszka Holland
    • Writer
      • Christopher Hampton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews88

    6.417.3K
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    Featured reviews

    BobLib

    "I'm always chasing Rimbauds"

    It's a good thing not too many people saw this film when it came out [no pun intended], because, if any of DiCaprio's female fans had seen him in this, one of his best early roles, his career would have been over well before he was involved in "Titanic." And that's because he's so utterly convincing as the tortured, bisexual teen genius poet Arthur Rimbaud, that it would undoubtedly set many of those young ladies to wondering if he'd played the part a little TOO well, if you get my meaning. If ever there was any such thing as a male femme fatale, It's Leo right here. Rumor has it that he tried to have the video pulled a few years ago, right after his "Titanic" success. It's a good thing he wasn't successful, because I think that this film rates right along with "The Basketball Diaries" as possibly his best performance.

    But it takes two to tango, at least in this case, and David Thewlis is almost as good opposite DiCaprio as Paul Verlaine, who began as Rimbaud's mentor and wound up as his long-time lover. As Verlaine was ugly and overweight, whereas Rimbaud was lithe and handsome, the two seemingly would have made an unbelieveably odd couple physically, but were drawn together more by their mutual likes and dislikes rather than physical attraction. And that's what you sense through all of their scenes together, a meeting of minds more than a meeting of bodies.

    There were many who praised this movie, there were many who hated it, but love it or hate it, it holds a strange fascination which makes you remember it long after you've seen it.
    7Lucky-63

    Eccentric and poetical

    This movie is not for the faint of heart or the conventional taste. It's not a fantasy.

    Like the real-life characters upon which the movie is based, TE is eccentric and poetical. French poet Rimbaud, who wrote almost everything he wrote as a teenager, has been admired by some of the most eccentric creative people of the last century. He was a very unusual teenager, being some kind of genius, some kind of lowlife, and a runaway. His poetry digs into and portrays life with discomforting and sometimes painful and sometimes ecstatic detail. His is the muse which revels in the squalor of creation.

    Many people will dislike this film because the two main characters, Rimbaud and Verlaine, are bisexual and not at all stereotypical. Both of them are snotty and selfish and violent and often despicable. (As Shakespeare probably was at times, but you'll never see him portrayed in movies that way.) These are not Robert Frost poets. These are worm and scat and sex and drug and rock'n'roll and get-down-and-get-dirty poets.

    Past that, it's the story of a great, if brief, flowering love ... the kind of love story you'd expect for people who live and breathe life in the way great alternaculture poets must.

    Eternity is where the sunlight mixes with the water. And the penetrating movie mixes with the prepared mind.
    8bkoganbing

    A Pair Of Talented Louts

    Total Eclipse is the story of the relationship between two men who definitely made their mark on French literature. Poets Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud have been compared to Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas, but aside from being gay the pairs have little in common. Wilde is a universally recognized talent who had the misfortune to fall in love with a spoiled young aristocrat in Douglas who had some pretenses to literary talent. Douglas was spoiled, but both he and Wilde conducted themselves well in public.

    Verlaine and Rimbaud were a pair of talented louts as Total Eclipse shows us in graphic detail. Wilde married for convention's sake at the time and did have two sons and was a loving husband. His is a Victorian Brokeback Mountain story. Verlaine was a drunk and an abusive husband who regularly beat on his wife and child who was totally fascinated by young Rimbaud. He was ten years older than Rimbaud in real life, the film does make him seem a great deal older. He did read some of Rimbaud's work as a teenage prodigy and sent for the country lad. You can feel sorry for Wilde and do in the films that tell his story. Verlaine as played by David Thewlis is a really hateful person, gay audiences can't work up any sympathy for him.

    However Rimbaud as played by Leonardo DiCaprio by look and talent makes you perfectly understand why Rimbaud became so obsessed with him. Verlaine was a political man, he was a supporter of the Paris Commune and was in fear of the police who would have loved to nail him on a morals charge if not on a political one. Rimbaud didn't have a political opinion in the world, he was a peasant kid from the Ardennes who partied hardy, drove Verlaine crazy and jealous, but both learned and fed off each other artistically. I found it interesting that Rimbaud and Verlaine flee to Great Britain of all places to be freer, the same place that in the next generation would persecute poor Oscar Wilde.

    DiCaprio and Thewlis play a couple of louts, but a fascinating pair of louts. Total Eclipse has both these guys eclipsing the supporting cast around them, that probably is the main weakness of the film. Still fans of both men shouldn't miss this film.
    Mag-13

    I agree with Andy below

    Arthur Rimbaud was famous for what? For changing the face of French and possibly all modern poetry. At the age of 17. Do we see any of this in the movie? No. We have a director who thinks that being gay was Rimbaud's muse. All through the film, I kept wondering, "when are they going to let him read his poetry, and show us WHY it was important, HOW it contrasted with conventional poetry at the time?" I mean, if you're brave enough to try to sell graphic homosexual scenes to a Merchant Ivory audience, then why not be brave enough to "bore" us with some literary analysis?
    6B24

    Genius

    Genius is by nature sui generis. Most of us can only observe and wonder, and from time to time pretend we are similarly gifted. As for the actual behavior of genius, it almost always entails what is commonly known as bad manners.

    The other striking feature of genius, for some but not all, is what is commonly known as insanity. Although modern science has defined various types of mental disorder and found causes and cures for some of them, it really begs the question to try to judge character or morality on the basis of scientific data. Art lies after all outside the realm of science, and always will do.

    Having said that, I believe the film Total Eclipse must be reviewed or criticized solely on whether it is a good work of art. My opinion is that it succeeds at some levels, and fails at others.

    I accept that the writer and director knew exactly what they were doing at every step. Except for a few quibbles about editing, I agree that the artistic concept and the technique are first rate. The musical score is excellent. The camera angles are generally adept at conveying the actions and emotions of the cast. Outdoor scenes tend to be well conceived.

    Unfortunately, all that falls by the wayside because of flaws in relating the story accurately and well to its origins. Anyone familiar with the lives and work of Verlaine and Rimbaud can only cringe at the superficiality of this film. As many others have pointed out, scant attention is paid to verse, and then only in a language -- English -- that only approximates the original. It would have been a graceful beginning to make this film in France with French characters speaking French, then allowing the subtitles to fill in the gaps for non-French-speaking viewers.

    What that conclusion implies, of course, is that the primary cast is wrong for this film. I really hate to say that, because DiCaprio and Thewlis are great actors doing the best they can to carry the film forward. Although I would have picked a different physical specimen for the role of Verlaine (for some odd reason the face of the late German director Fassbinder comes to mind), the choice of an androgyne for Rimbaud was physically right on target.

    Finally, I am appalled at some of the comments here that betray a preoccupation with sex. "Zany" is the only word one can apply to subjective and even judgmental interpretations of this film about this or that scene or bit of action not in accord with a viewer's personal sexual expectations. My own view is that this was, if anything, a highly bowdlerized adaptation of reality.

    In short, recast this in French, and focus more on the full text of Rimbaud's genius.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ouzo was used as a replacement for absinthe for the drinking scenes filmed on the first day. Because the scene turned out so well, method drinking was adopted for the rest of filming. As a result, Thewlis had admitted in a interview that he can't really remember making the film at all.
    • Goofs
      In the Café Andre where the adult Isabelle Rimbaud meets with Paul Verlaine, the typeface on the window is clearly in Helvetica, a typeface that was not created until 1954.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Arthur Rimbaud: I've found it. What? Eternity. It's the sun mingled with the sea.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The American President/Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls/Kicking and Screaming/Carrington/Total Eclipse (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Arrival
      Composed by Hank Deckon and Jan A.P. Kaczmarek

      Performed by Warsaw Symphony Orchestra and Wilanow String Quartet

      Conductor [Warsaw Symphony] Krzesimir Debski

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 12, 1997 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
      • Belgium
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Eclipse totale
    • Filming locations
      • Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert, Brussels, Belgium
    • Production companies
      • FIT Productions
      • Portman Productions
      • Société Française de Production (SFP)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $340,139
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $131,269
      • Nov 5, 1995
    • Gross worldwide
      • $340,139
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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