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Le huitième jour

  • 1996
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Daniel Auteuil and Pascal Duquenne in Le huitième jour (1996)
ComedyDrama

An unusual and wonderful friendship develops between a busy but unhappy salesman and a resident of a mental asylum.An unusual and wonderful friendship develops between a busy but unhappy salesman and a resident of a mental asylum.An unusual and wonderful friendship develops between a busy but unhappy salesman and a resident of a mental asylum.

  • Director
    • Jaco Van Dormael
  • Writer
    • Jaco Van Dormael
  • Stars
    • Daniel Auteuil
    • Pascal Duquenne
    • Miou-Miou
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jaco Van Dormael
    • Writer
      • Jaco Van Dormael
    • Stars
      • Daniel Auteuil
      • Pascal Duquenne
      • Miou-Miou
    • 42User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 6 nominations total

    Photos13

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    Top cast72

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    Daniel Auteuil
    Daniel Auteuil
    • Harry
    Pascal Duquenne
    Pascal Duquenne
    • Georges
    Miou-Miou
    Miou-Miou
    • Julie
    Henri Garcin
    Henri Garcin
    • Le directeur de la banque
    Isabelle Sadoyan
    • la mère de Georges
    Michele Maes
    • Nathalie
    • (as Michèle Maes)
    Fabienne Loriaux
    • la soeur de Georges - Fabienne
    Alice van Dormael
    • Alice
    Juliette Van Dormael
    • Juliette
    Marie-Pierre Meinzel
    • La vendeuse du magasin du chaussures
    Sabrina Leurquin
    • La serveuse du snack
    Laszlo Harmati
    • Luis Mariano
    Alain Bougnet
    Magali Cote
    Jean Désert
    Michele Gousset
      Philippe Minck
        Dominique Lecat
        • Director
          • Jaco Van Dormael
        • Writer
          • Jaco Van Dormael
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews42

        7.510.4K
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        Featured reviews

        Gordon-11

        A touching film for good natured souls

        This film is about the unlikely friendship between a businessman and a man with Down Syndrome.

        The character development in this film is excellent. We get to believe that Harry is a businessman who neglects his family, and Georges is an innocent man who craves loving and care from the "normal" society. Acting is excellent, and the Cannes best actor award is well deserved.

        The fantasy scenes in the film highlights the fact that Georges misery towards his abandonment by his family, and his desire to be treated like a normal person. The song that gets played repeatedly also reinforces this message. The film shows that people who are mentally handicapped are good natured. We have been treating them with discrimination and neglect, a fact that is highlighted by the scene where Georges gives a present to the waitress in the kitchen). If we get to understand and share these people's world, both we and the mentally handicapped can become very happy.

        I was so drawn into the film and the characters' emotional experiences. It is a touching film for good natured souls.
        9dan-476

        Original, refreshing, challenging, puts Rain Man in the shade

        This is the French and Belgians doing what they do best. It's quirky, visually inventive, exhilarating and emotionally challenging storytelling. Director Jaco van Dormael takes us into the world of Georges, a Down's Syndrome sufferer and his quest for a meaningful relationship with someone, just anyone. This is not done in a patronising way but with a great sense of fun and also honesty. Georges' interplay with corporate management guru, Harry is dazzlingly handled - shifting from comedy to tragedy back to comedy again with breathtaking ease.

        The Eighth Day puts similar Hollywood fare like Barry Levinson's Oscar winning Rain Man or Robert Zemeckis's Forrest Gump well and truly in the shade. At times, it evokes the humour of Milos Forman's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest with shades of Dennis Potter thrown in for good measure.

        As the emotionally blunted and desperately lonely yuppie, Harry, Daniel Auteuil turns in yet another sublime performance. But it is matched by the brilliant Pascal Duquenne as Georges. It's a movie with uniformly strong performances and so many, memorable set pieces - the shoe shop scene, car showroom scene, George's dance to Genesis's 'Jesus He Knows Me,' the conference scene, the fireworks scene. If you haven't seen it, there's only one thing to do. Just rent it or attend a screening at a retro cinema near you and see what you've been missing. Better still, buy this movie. Sheer genius.....
        writers_reign

        Of Mice And Rain Men

        Foolishly, without bothering to learn any more about it than that it involved Daniel Auteuil and a guy with Downs Syndrome, I avoided this classic til a couple of days ago when they were offering the video for silly money. Let me put my ten cents in with every comment I have read here immediately and state categorically that this film is a JOY. Okay, you know going in that a major character is handicapped so you figure that at some point the movie is going to manipulate your emotions and you're ready for that but, like most things, it's all in the wrist, and this one has an extra metatarsal. It is, of course, the salesman who spends his life lecturing on how to manipulate the buyer who is himself manipulated by Georges - nice touch naming him after the 'normal' one of the two buddies in 'Of Mice And Men', where the retarded Lenny is looked after by George - the irritating, exasperating, impossible lovable guy who walks into his life after Harry nearly ran into his. Okay, to make this work you need to create a character who is the complete opposite of Georges, a guy literally too busy making money and being successful to stop and smell the roses. A guy who misses his daughters dreadfully since his estranged wife - it's not clear if they are divorced or just separated - took them away yet is so busy that he completely forgets to pick them up and leaves them waiting alone at the train station; who opts to attend a conference on his daughter's birthday, you get the picture. Georges misses someone, too. His mother, who is dead. Time and again in his loneliness and hurt he conjures her up and we see the great love they shared. This then, is the back story and the scene is set for what Hollywood used to call a 'meet-cute'. Here, Auteuil, in despair, his mind in a turmoil, driving through the rain runs over something large which he failed to see. Turns out to be the dog that had attached itself to Georges who has lit out from his residential home after watching all the other residents being picked up by relatives. Now all that is left is for Georges to 'change' Harry, to humanise him if you will and this he does in spades. This is a film chock full of laughter and tears and the fact that a leading French actress Miou-Miou agreed to play what is little more than a cameo as Harry's estranged wife speaks volumes for the quality of the writing. Now and again the cynicism surrounding the gongs of filmdom, especially the Oscars, get it right and how appropriate that BOTH these superb actors copped the 'Best Actor' nod at Cannes. 10/10
        10Sylviastel

        One of My Favorite Movies!

        I saw this film first on my way home from Paris to Newark aboard Air France in August 1996. The film itself I believe is quite a masterpiece. It's the kind of film that people should be making. I still think Daniel Auteuil is one of the sexiest actors around. In this French film, he plays a divorced father and businessman who has lost his zest for life until he across a Down Syndrome man who lives in an institution with other Down Syndrome patients. The actors including the actor who actually has Down Syndrome create a believable friendship and relationship between these two unlikely men. Daniel's life and ours changes forever with the Down Syndrome man. He realizes that life is not just work and not play but for the living and loving and that's what life should be all about. The ending is kind of silly though but I still think it's one of my favorite movies. It's enough to bring a tear to your eye.
        Chrysanthepop

        The Mystery of the 8th Day

        With 'Le Huitième Jour' director Jaco van Dormael tells us a moving tale of two complete strangers (who couldn't be more different from each other), whose paths cross as they travel opposite directions. After this odd encounter, together, both take turns heading towards each other's destinations but with heartbreaking results. However, this journey allows them to find something they didn't know they were looking for.

        Let's get the flaws out of the way: Certain scenes may feel a little dramatic but it still remains within the tone of the film, never looking out of place. Even though Harry and Georges are the primary focus of the film, some of the important supporting characters are poorly developed, especially Georges's hating sister and Miou Miou's Julie.

        But those minuses aside, is 'Le Huitième Jour' a road movie (the landscapes are dazzling)? Is it a study of two characters? Is it a 'buddy' movie (certainly not the typical Hollywood kind)? Is it a dramedy?

        It's poetry. The film, in a way, moves from one genre to another but it flows beautifully. The balance in humour, and intensity is first rate. The jokes work well and the timing is just right. I did find the ending to be a tad too dramatic.

        What Georges shows the viewer is that, while people desire similarities, it is our differences that make us unique. Yet, that is the very reason why Georges is rejected by the 'real world'. What Harry further shows is that none of these supposed similarities that people look for in each other matters because acceptance, respect, being open to possibilities and being true to oneself are what will bring the greater joy.

        'Le Huitième Jour' is stunningly filmed and wonderfully acted. Pascal Duquenne and Daniel Auteuil are superb. Duquenne delivers a very natural performance and Auteuil is terrifically restrained. They are well supported by Isabelle Sadoyan, Michele Maes and the two actors who play Harry's daughter.

        'Le Huitième Jour' engages you right from the start. It's funny, intense, enlightening and reaches straight for the heart.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          Both Pascal Duquenne and Daniel Auteuil tied for the Best Actor Award at the 1996 Cannes Film Festival for their roles in this film. This was the first time such an event had happened.
        • Quotes

          [lying on the grass in the sun]

          Harry: We should get going.

          Georges: Just one more minute.

          Harry: Okay.

          [they lie down for a minute more]

          Harry: [looks at his watch] Okay, it's over.

          Georges: A nice minute, for us.

        • Connections
          Featured in 54th Golden Globe Awards (1997)
        • Soundtracks
          Mexico
          Music by Francis Lopez

          Lyrics by Raymond Vincy

          Performed by Luis Mariano

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        FAQ

        • How long is The Eighth Day?
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        Details

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        • Release date
          • May 22, 1996 (France)
        • Countries of origin
          • Belgium
          • France
          • United Kingdom
        • Language
          • French
        • Also known as
          • The Eighth Day
        • Filming locations
          • Brussels, Brussels-Capital, Belgium
        • Production companies
          • Canal+
          • Center for Film and Audiovisual Arts of the French Community of Belgium
          • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Budget
          • FRF 25,000,000 (estimated)
        • Gross US & Canada
          • $416,401
        • Opening weekend US & Canada
          • $14,397
          • Mar 9, 1997
        • Gross worldwide
          • $33,031,984
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          1 hour 58 minutes
        • Color
          • Color
        • Sound mix
          • Stereo
          • Dolby SR
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.85 : 1

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        Daniel Auteuil and Pascal Duquenne in Le huitième jour (1996)
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