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On connaît la chanson

  • 1997
  • Tous publics
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
On connaît la chanson (1997)
ComedyDramaMusicalRomance

A musical story about how people find their love on the streets of beautiful Paris.A musical story about how people find their love on the streets of beautiful Paris.A musical story about how people find their love on the streets of beautiful Paris.

  • Director
    • Alain Resnais
  • Writers
    • Agnès Jaoui
    • Jean-Pierre Bacri
  • Stars
    • Pierre Arditi
    • Sabine Azéma
    • Jean-Pierre Bacri
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alain Resnais
    • Writers
      • Agnès Jaoui
      • Jean-Pierre Bacri
    • Stars
      • Pierre Arditi
      • Sabine Azéma
      • Jean-Pierre Bacri
    • 18User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 9 nominations total

    Photos8

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Pierre Arditi
    Pierre Arditi
    • Claude
    Sabine Azéma
    Sabine Azéma
    • Odile Lalande
    Jean-Pierre Bacri
    Jean-Pierre Bacri
    • Nicolas
    André Dussollier
    André Dussollier
    • Simon
    Agnès Jaoui
    Agnès Jaoui
    • Camille Lalande
    Lambert Wilson
    Lambert Wilson
    • Marc Duveyrier
    Jane Birkin
    Jane Birkin
    • Jane
    Jean-Paul Roussillon
    Jean-Paul Roussillon
    • Father
    Nelly Borgeaud
    Nelly Borgeaud
    • Doctor #3
    Götz Burger
    Götz Burger
    • Von Choltitz
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    • Young Man with Cheque
    Charlotte Kady
    • Restaurant Customer
    Jacques Mauclair
    • Doctor #1
    Pierre Meyrand
    Pierre Meyrand
    • Cafe Owner
    Claire Nadeau
    • Female Guest
    Dominique Rozan
    Dominique Rozan
    • Elderly Man
    Jean-Chrétien Sibertin-Blanc
    • Young Fired Man
    Bonnafet Tarbouriech
    Bonnafet Tarbouriech
    • Doctor #2
    • Director
      • Alain Resnais
    • Writers
      • Agnès Jaoui
      • Jean-Pierre Bacri
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.34.5K
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    Featured reviews

    frankgaipa

    The Sound of Silence

    In the unapproximate center of "On connaît la chanson," find a marvelous joke that missed by everyone at the sold out SFIFF screening I attended. If you want to try to catch it yourself, then don't read on! I'm writing to those of you who didn't or won't catch it. Four or five characters are seated chatting or arguing, I forget, round a table in a busy restaurant. As you know from other comments here, the script incorporates line fragments from well-known French songs (kind of like those "hidden picture" puzzles in the dentist office magazine). As each occurs, someone bursts into song. One of our group, after an unremarkable, perfectly conversational pause, says "je ne regret rien," then pauses, as does everyone else round the table. They look at one another, everyone at everyone, the very clatter of the restaurant seems to pause, waiting, and for the only time in this film, nobody takes the cue. Nobody breaks into the Piaf standard.
    Firas

    a funny singing film!

    it's a simple funny film that talks about few people who know each other or get to know each other afterward. The aspect that makes it differ from other movies is that the protagonists sing often their feelings or ideas! The used songs are popular French songs that are well known by everybody in France. I liked it in general but it is not a plot that interests me that much since the most of these relations were not that interesting for me. The most important human aspect that was shown in this movie is that many things are not as they seem to be! Some people show that they are strong and have great achievements and they have everything under control but they are not that achieving! They have to accept that they are only normal people and show their true selves to the others.
    8djenning

    charming, but also challenging

    This film is light, but not empty. Following the interconnected lives of several Parisian bourgeois, the film uses snippets of popular music to demonstrate the emotional state of the characters in the style of a conventional musical. However, the music does both more than this and less. The characters do not sing their parts so much as lip-sync (badly) to tunes that one hears on the radio or in a movie. The songs are related to the characters' "inner lives" as a Nike swoosh or a Dior label would be - and that's the point. Each character has a musical style of sorts and maybe even a theme song, but the song "belongs" to the character like motion "belongs" to a jelly-fish. The characters, like the jelly-fish that are a motif of the finale scene, are less than unique, and much less than in control. However, they are at the same time quite human and sympathetic.

    Resnais, whom I count as being one of cinema's great geniuses, has a similar approach in On connaît la chanson as he does in Mon oncle d'Amérique, with pop songs in lieu of mice and jelly-fish in lieu of Henri Laborit. (See the info on the latter movie if this doesn't make sense...) What both films do is make one think about important questions of the complex relationship between brains, minds, and souls, and they do so without clobbering the viewer over the head with preachiness and over-simplifications. Contrast this with the sermonizing of the abominable Lars von Trier (of Dancer in the Dark fame) as well as with the mindless drek that that is generally shown in U.S. theaters.
    writers_reign

    You Keep Coming Bacri Like A Song

    I will always go out of my way - in December last year I tracked down a tiny theatre - capacity roughly 50 - in a Parisian alley to catch a performance of their 'Un air de famille' (yes, it was great, thanks for asking) to see anything written by Jean-Pierre Bacri and Agnes Jouai, and if they are performing as well, as they do in this movie, then that is icing on the cake. I tend to associate Resnais with pretentious intellectual 'popcorn' movies like Last Year At Marienbad and Hiroshima, Mon Amour so it makes a welcome change to discover that he can turn his hand to mainstream and deliver, with a little help from a great script and great acting from Bacri and Jouai, a great feel-good movie. The usual suspects - Andre Dussolier, Pierre Arditi, etc are on hand and turn in the usual above par performances. This is one to savor. 8/10
    8ruby_fff

    A treat exceptionnel for Alain Resnais enthusiasts - French cinema merveilleux

    Reminiscent of Jacques Demy's 1968 "The Young Girls of Rochefort" where characters now and then burst into song (and dance) to convey the story, and Eric Rohmer's flavor of intertwined relationships and coincidental meetings of characters that wrap around a tale, Alain Resnais' treatment here in 1997 "Same Old Song" has his characters burst into lines of songs in between dialogs. Irrespective of the mix and match of a male vocal coming out of a female character or vice versa, they are excerpted strains and words chosen from certain songs that propel the storytelling. It's as if the characters are thinking aloud in songs on the situation or predicament at hand. It is rather fun once you get a sense of what Resnais was trying to deliver. Being an Alain Resnais film, intellectual exchanges and philosophical tones are never lacking.

    Definitely reminded me of his treatment on 1980 "Mon oncle d'Amerique" where he has scientific mice experiment scenes juxtaposed against the human (brain) reactions to relationships and love. In this 1997 "On connait la chanson", his fascination with how people think - how the brain cells work in each of the characters, is again deftly demonstrated. At the last segment, where a theoretical explosion of the minds occur as gray matters collide - there was an appearance of a graphical ear-shape (in quiet wavy motion) in the center of it all - it's amazing to see how Resnais' mind at 75 was still so very much into studying and unraveling human emotions, offering us life lessons in love.

    The story centers around two sisters, Camille the tour guide who's also writing a thesis (Agnes Jaoui) and her popular and successful sibling Odile (Sobine Azema), and four men in their lives: an old flame of Odile - Nicolas (Jean-Pierre Bacri), husband of Odile - Claude (Pierre Arditi), writer of radio plays and quiet admirer of Camille - Simon (Andre Dussollier, more casually groomed than usual), and profiteering real-estate agent of Odile, fanciful beau of Camille and arrogant boss of Simon - Marc (Lambert Wilson).

    Typographically oriented, I can't help noticing the sequence of treatment to the credit roll at the end of the film: it started with a centrifugal look of the names of les chanteurs, followed by horizontal scroll from right to left of the main cast and crew, then a quick shooting upwards to facilitate the conventional bottom to top scroll of rest of the credits.

    It may not be a French film for just anybody, it certainly is delightful to experience. (An Artistic License and Merchant-Ivory Films production indeed!) The subtitles, translated by Ian Burley, were super: the lyrics actually rhyme in English, e.g., "resist", "exist", "egotist"!

    This film was dedicated to Dennis Potter, a cerebral genius he was. Check out his 1996 "Karaoke" (a multitude of colorfully complex characters) and "Cold Lazarus" (quite a sci-fi notion not completely implausible) - both centers around Albert Finney being the main character, and as always, a tour de force performance Finney delivered.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film is dedicated to the memory of Dennis Potter, and is in the style of Potter's lip-sync musicals like Pennies from Heaven (1978), The Singing Detective (1986) and Lipstick on Your Collar (1993).
    • Connections
      Featured in 6 à la maison: Episode dated 27 January 2021 (2021)
    • Soundtracks
      J'ai Deux Amours
      Music by Vincent Scotto

      Lyrics by Georges Koger and Henri Varna

      Performed by Josephine Baker

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 12, 1997 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
      • Italy
    • Official site
      • Artistic License Films
    • Languages
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Same Old Song
    • Filming locations
      • Hôtel Meurice - 228 Rue de Rivoli, Paris 1, Paris, France(opening scene: Camille tells about von Choltitz in front of the hotel)
    • Production companies
      • Arena Films
      • Caméra One
      • France 2 Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • €7,900,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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