Le parfum d'Yvonne
- 1994
- Tous publics
- 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
How the life of Victor Chmara toppled during the course of a single day during the summer of 1958?How the life of Victor Chmara toppled during the course of a single day during the summer of 1958?How the life of Victor Chmara toppled during the course of a single day during the summer of 1958?
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Sandra Extercatte
- Yvonne
- (as Sandra Majani)
Claude Dereppe
- Roger Fossorie
- (as Claude Derepp)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
10ohoberg
If I would have the choice to take only one movie with me on the famous lonely island I would take this one. The director Leconte succeed to show what's really about in a relationship between a man and a woman. And that 's very difficult to show, very difficult.
And the beautiful actors, scene, Music ( Bach, Aznavour etc.)
To my mind it's not necessary to know from where the acting people are coming, and to be honest, after watching this movie more than twenty times for example I still don't know in which things Dr. Rene Meinthe is involved. The film shows the morbidity and noblesse in those times simply wonderful.
It's a little bit different from the novel but that doesn't matter. So enjoy. And of course it's a french one. Or does anyone of you really believe that you can make an erotic or at least a love scene between Britt Pit and Angela Dohle, that would look alike a frog is kissing an Allien. But that'a different thing.
And the beautiful actors, scene, Music ( Bach, Aznavour etc.)
To my mind it's not necessary to know from where the acting people are coming, and to be honest, after watching this movie more than twenty times for example I still don't know in which things Dr. Rene Meinthe is involved. The film shows the morbidity and noblesse in those times simply wonderful.
It's a little bit different from the novel but that doesn't matter. So enjoy. And of course it's a french one. Or does anyone of you really believe that you can make an erotic or at least a love scene between Britt Pit and Angela Dohle, that would look alike a frog is kissing an Allien. But that'a different thing.
Adaptation of a novel by Patrick Modiano, "le parfum d'Yvonne" represents another Patrice Leconte's success. To make this film, the director drew from several elements dating from his previous movies. Thus, the doctor Meinthe (excellent Jean-Pierre Marielle) is very close to Michel Mortez in "Tandem" (1987) while Yvonne's sensual beauty evokes Mathilde's in "the hairdresser's wife" (1990). So, Leconte turned a novel into a personal movie.
This movie tells a past love story that brings on a deep nostalgia due to gorgeous summer pictures enhanced by a luminous photography. It's almost a poetic and dreamlike work. And however, this happiness is too good to be true. Indeed, behind this idle and free life, hide zones of shadows. Victor Chmara claims to Yvonne that he is a wealthy Russian earl but he's nothing of the sort. He's just a young man who fled Paris so as to avoid his military enlistment (we are in 1958 and at this time, it is the Algerian war). Moreover, he wants to go to the USA but Yvonne refuses because Victor can't speak English. So, she leaves him and there's this famous sentence that says: love stories, in general don't have a happy ending. It is true.
Leconte built his movie on a long flashback and he alternates the story with two of the main characters' current situation. From this moment, we can take down a strong contrast between the shiny pictures of a celebrated and distant summer and the dark photography to connote a dull present that shows the main characters' distress and bitterness (especially the doctor Meinthe).
A beautiful and bitter movie. If you are a fan of Patrice Leconte, don't miss this one.
This movie tells a past love story that brings on a deep nostalgia due to gorgeous summer pictures enhanced by a luminous photography. It's almost a poetic and dreamlike work. And however, this happiness is too good to be true. Indeed, behind this idle and free life, hide zones of shadows. Victor Chmara claims to Yvonne that he is a wealthy Russian earl but he's nothing of the sort. He's just a young man who fled Paris so as to avoid his military enlistment (we are in 1958 and at this time, it is the Algerian war). Moreover, he wants to go to the USA but Yvonne refuses because Victor can't speak English. So, she leaves him and there's this famous sentence that says: love stories, in general don't have a happy ending. It is true.
Leconte built his movie on a long flashback and he alternates the story with two of the main characters' current situation. From this moment, we can take down a strong contrast between the shiny pictures of a celebrated and distant summer and the dark photography to connote a dull present that shows the main characters' distress and bitterness (especially the doctor Meinthe).
A beautiful and bitter movie. If you are a fan of Patrice Leconte, don't miss this one.
The film creates a melancholic feeling of nostalgia. Viewers, who are able and willing to engage with it, will "mourn"/suffer with the characters and for the characters who, with all their hopes, dreams and (hinted) regrets, remain victims of their time or prisoners of their unlived lives.
Yvonne's sensualité, which is not an eroticism à la américaine, is, above all, part of her wider appeal: With Yvonne there is light, hope (America), dreams and the possibility of an escape from the existence of everyday life for Victor and Dr. Rene.
However, both characters seems to sense that these dreams and hopes are as éphémères as the summer they spend with Yvonne.
The melancholy in this film may be a bit on the sentimental side, which happens when you link it to nostalgia (but not necessarily as "In the Mood for Love" shows).
But I'd recommend it anytime, esp. If you have a chance to watch it in a cinema.
Yvonne's sensualité, which is not an eroticism à la américaine, is, above all, part of her wider appeal: With Yvonne there is light, hope (America), dreams and the possibility of an escape from the existence of everyday life for Victor and Dr. Rene.
However, both characters seems to sense that these dreams and hopes are as éphémères as the summer they spend with Yvonne.
The melancholy in this film may be a bit on the sentimental side, which happens when you link it to nostalgia (but not necessarily as "In the Mood for Love" shows).
But I'd recommend it anytime, esp. If you have a chance to watch it in a cinema.
A truly beautiful film by Patrice Leconte. As usual Patrice Leconte provides us with a magnificent blend of a fine cast (a memorable performance by Jean-Pierre Marielle as Dr. Rene Meinthe), beautiful music and photography and a captivating story. A film less known than Patrice Leconte's "Le mari de la coiffeuse" but equally enjoyable.
I have really no idea if I like this film for its good points, or to intensely dislike it for the bad ones. The title should have been, in my opinion, ' Villa Triste ' as it is not only a better title ( based on Patrick Modiano's novel ) but because who cares or knows what perfume Yvonne wears ? I only watched the film as I like Modiano's work, and as I have not read this specific one I hoped for better. I am convinced the book has more merit than Patrice Leconte's film. Bad things first. Sandra Majon was one of the most tepid actors I have ever seen, and in this film the passivity of Hippolyte Girardot's acting in a complex role was in my opinion quite simply lazy. And then there is a sad old homosexual played by Jean-Pierre Marielle that showed off every pathetic gesture that presumably the director thought every ageing homosexual should, or does have. The music is relentlessly soft focussed when it is not maudlin, and so is the camera work in far too many scenes. Now for the good points. It does have a few powerful scenes and to avoid spoilers the Algerian War raging in France in 1958 was sometimes put to the foreground and the regret of wasted and passing years movingly shown. I do not want to give away more except to say the ' erotic ' scenes were dull, and repetitious and totally unconvincing. I give it a 5 for an attempt to put a Modiano book on screen, and for the ambiguity of motives adequately conveyed. As I said my opinion of this film is in the balance, but with more thought probably veering towards the bad.
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferenced in Parole de cinéaste: Patrice Leconte dans la cour des grands (2015)
- How long is Yvonne's Perfume?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 29m(89 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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